Kelli Eason |
Just like the most recent Olympics and presidential election, the digital world we live in makes this papal election quite a different animal than it ever was before. Consider the following:
·
Fantasy Conclave – This friendly
competition is not unlike fantasy football except there is no money involved,
and prizes are provided by sponsors. You choose the cardinal you believe will
be the next pope, the day on which he will be elected and the name you think he
will choose. (I went with Cardinal Rivera Carrera from Mexico, day three, and
said he would choose the name Leo.) I’m sure my grandmother never
expected something like this.
·
Pope Alarm – This digital
notification service is only for the most dedicated conclave watchers. It sends
a text message, email or both to registered users to notify them as soon as the
white smoke appears, confirming the next pope. This may include a text in the
wee hours of the morning as Rome is anywhere from five to eight hours ahead of
the United States.
·
Papal watchers on Twitter –
Mashable published a handy dandy list of five of the top papal watchers to
follow during the conclave. The list includes a reporter who first broke the
news of Benedict XVI’s abdication because she understands Latin.
This papal conclave also brought to the forefront the idea of campaigning for certain candidates. Although the church works very hard to maintain the secrecy of the ballots and the conclave, it seems that the more connected we are, the more speculation there is. I found several interesting articles on this phenomenon:
·
The Sweet Sistine – Tapping into
the popularity of March Madness, the Religion News Service put together this
bracket of what they believe is the most likely list of candidates. They even
included odds provided by Irish bookmaker paddypower.com.
o
If you’re interested, here’s the final
bracket developed from more than 40,000 votes.
·
A possible American pope – There
has never been an American pope, but it seems that the American media was pretty
excited about the fact that…there could be. There was a lot of buzz surrounding
Cardinal
Sean O’Malley from Boston and Cardinal
Timothy Dolan from New York.
·
A wide open field – There was no
clear favorite, which may be why so many people were campaigning and
speculating and hoping to influence the outcome.
The church hasn’t changed much in the last few hundred years, so I didn’t count on social media, citizen journalists or the 24/7 news cycle altering the process or the outcome. Still, it made for quite an interesting conclave, and it sure was fun to feel like a participant…even if it is just part of the Fantasy Conclave! Unfortunately, I was nowhere close to winning the fantasy league. Not many people were. Only 0.7 percent of participants, or 41 people, chose Cardinal Jorge Mario Bergoglio. Only six correctly predicted that he would be chosen on day two, and no one was anticipating that he would choose Francis as his papal name. But I guess congratulations are in order for Michael Brennan of Wisconsin, who officially won and gets bragging rights for the remainder of Pope Francis’ tenure!
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