Where to watch the 2012 second presidential debate live online

It will be two out of three for President Barack Obama and former Gov. Mitt Romney Tuesday night as they meet in Hempstead, New York, for the second of three presidential debates. This debate will be held town-hall style, meaning that people in the audience can ask the candidates their own question, so things could get interesting.

Not in front of your TV when the debate airs at 9p.m. ET / 6p.m. PT? No worries, we collected numerous options to stream the entire event on your computer, iPad or mobile phone. And this time, we’re adding some other ways to stay engaged with the debate, like options for post-debate analysis. Check out our ultimate guide to watching the second presidential debate live online below:

Where to watch it live

  • The debate officially starts at 9 p.m. ET / 6 p.m. PT. It will last 90 minutes, and it will be moderated by CNN’s chief political correspondent Candy Crowley.
  • ABC News will be streaming the debate live on its YouTube channel  as well as the YouTube politics channel and ABC’s iPad app.
  • NBC will stream the debate on its NBCPolitics.com site.
  • CBS News will have its live stream up on Ustream.
  • CNN will stream the debate on its website as well as to to its iOS apps.
  • Fox News will be streaming the debate on its site and feature some insights into the most popular topics of the evening through an exclusive collaboration with Twitter during its post-debate coverage.
  • The Wall Street Journal is providing a live feed of the debate on it site as well as through its WSJ Live apps on the iPad, on Android devices and various Smart TV platforms.
  • The Washington Post will stream the debate on its site.
  • Hulu will feature live feeds from ABC, Fox and The Wall Street Journal, including pre- and post-debate content.
  • Politico’s website will feature a pre-debate show starting at 5 p.m. PT as well as the actual debate and some post-debate coverage.
  • Univision’s live stream of the presidential debate will be translated into Spanish in real-time.
  • C-SPAN is going to stream the debate on it site as part of its debates hub. C-SPAN’s live feed comes with closed captions, which can be turned on here.
  • PBS Newshour will stream the entire debate on its site as well.
  • Microsoft’s Xbox will show the debate through the Elections 2012 app, which will also feature some live polling (Xbox LIVE gold membership required).
  • Aereo will give New York-based viewers two hours of free access to its TV streaming service to watch live streams of major broadcasters’ debate coverage on their laptops or mobile devices.

What to do during the debate

  • The rules both parties agreed on ahead of the debate can be found here.
  • The Peel companion app will allow Android users to digitally cheer and boo during the debate, and see how others like the performance of both candidates.
  • Ponderoo does something similar for iOS, but with a more playful UI.
  • ConnecTV will poll users of its second screen app (available for iPad, Windows and OS X) in real time about the performance of both candidates.
  • Al Jazeera English once again teamed up with Reddit for context and commentary during the debate.
  • Twitter is providing curated tweets on its #debates micro-site.
  • PolitiFact and Factcheck.org will be fact checking the debate in real time on Twitter – follow their accounts @politifact and @factcheckdotorg to see whether both candidates are telling the truth.
  • The Sunlight Foundation will again fact check the debate in real time and provide a live stream with contextual data as part of its Sunlight Live project.
  • The Debate Drinking Game is a less serious take on the rhetorics used during the event (please drink responsibly).

Where to catch up on the debate

  • Archived streams: Hulu, PBS Newshour, C-SPAN and many of the other sites mentioned above are making an archived stream of the entire event available after it concludes. Please let us know in the comments below if you can find the site where it goes up first!
  • Transcript: The Commission on Presidential Debates will host a transcript of the debate on its site.

We will update this post with new links right up to the start of the debate. Let us know in the comments if you come across any other good resources!

For more on how to watch news and other TV programming without paying for cable, check out my ebook Cut the Cord: All You Need to Know to Drop Cable.


GigaOM