To sum up: Both “from the get go” and “from the word go” are simple, informal expressions that are American in origin, and both are more or less widely used.
Here are recent media examples:
1. from the word go:
After months of anticipation, News Corp’s Rupert Murdoch finally showed off The Daily, his attempt to bring the daily newspaper to the iPad, as a finished product yesterday in New York City.
In the end, we have a multimedia magazine that's not all that interesting.
We’ve been hearing about this thing for so long, in some ways it was bound to be a disappointment. Robert McGarvey wrote an Internet Evolution blog on the matter back in November, suggesting it might save journalism. I’m here to tell you, it’s probably not going to do that.
First, the details: The Daily, as the name suggests, is a daily iPad newspaper. It costs 99 cents a week, or $40 for a year....
What strikes me immediately is that The Daily looks like a conventional news magazine. I don’t know what I was expecting -- perhaps something new and more exciting -- but what I got was essentially a multimedia iPad version of Time.
Sure, the multimedia elements are nice, but I can highly recommend The Guardian's Eyewitness or the Life Explorer apps for some really dazzling photo journalism -- both of which are free, by the way. And the fact that The Daily includes video? Well, of course it includes video.
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