Tips include: ‘Write the spoken word, not the literary one’ when scripting voiceovers; and ‘Video agencies sell pictures, so should you.’
Tag Archives: Video
ESPN in video content deal with AOL.com
ESPN has made its first online content deal to provide video content to AOL.com.
Clips from the sports site will appear in an ESPN channel and will be viewed via an embedded video player.
The video will also be searchable on the internet portal’s site. The player will offer links to ESPN.com content related to the clips.
According to a press release from the company, in 2007 ESPN.com videos were viewed 1.2 billion times.
Reflections on the life of a videojournalist
Having spent April 1 shadowing the two-person web video team at the Express and Star, I came away with:
- 3 minutes 41 seconds of video footage
- 14 minutes of audio
- 54 photos
After a day spent gathering the material I then spent approximately two days editing it for the piece on the site, entailing two slideshows with audio (40s and 48s), one audio clip (6mins 49s) and one video clip (2 mins 20s).
Okay – so I’ve not been specifically trained as a multimedia reporter, which might not make me the fastest when it comes to editing. But essentially two days work resulted in one feature.
Similarly, on the Express and Star‘s team, videojournalist Victoria Hoe spent two hours boiling down 16 minutes of footage into a 1min 50s final package.
The Express and Star’s set up with a dedicated video team trained on a Press Association videojournalism course means that it’s time well spent: they put up around 20 videos a week – many shot, edited and published in the same day – and are using the medium in a variety of ways to add value to other areas or stories on the site, as well as for standalone pieces.
But not all publishers have such well-established roles and departments and, having now experienced it first hand, trying to be an all-in-one multimedia reporter/editor/publisher is extremely time consuming.
This is why I voted for ‘Not on its own – video has to be part of a mixed media package from papers in the digital age’ in Journalism.co.uk’s poll on whether video can save newspapers.
While creating such a role may enable publishers to stretch their resources and staff to increase their multimedia content, the benefits of doing this for staff and the resulting content must be slim. As it is so time-consuming, surely it’s better to get it right?
From my day out last week ‘right’ to me means seeing video as a new way of storytelling. It can work with text, but should add something new to text articles and not just as a scripted piece to camera rehashing the article.
The VJs I spoke to said it was crucial to think visually and in sequences to ensure you get all the shots needed while on location. Think visually and video can become a great medium for explaining and representing stories in an alternative way to print.
What’s more it’s another way to reach out to your audience and new members of that readership, so if set up and executed well it will add value – and hopefully traffic – to your site.
Video search engine Blinkx partners Guardian
Guardian.co.uk has agreed a deal with blinkx to make its video content available through the search engine’s website.
News, current affairs, travel and entertainment video content from the paper’s website will be searchable on blinkx.com.
The site has also announced a partnership with EuroNews – the multilingual pan-European news channel.
In a press release Suranga Chandratillake, founder and CEO of blinkx, said the content deals were backed by the popularity of searching for news-related videos on the web.
Under the terms of both deals advertising revenue generated by the content will be shared between partners.
NOTW website wins right to show Mosley ‘Nazi-orgy’ video
The News of the World has been granted permission to republish a video on its website of Max Mosley, despite attempts by the formula one boss to have the footage removed.
Mosley, who is alleged to have participated in a Nazi-style orgy, had sought a High Court injunction banning the newspaper from showing the video or using images of the incident in the paper.
His application was refused today prompting a fighting statement from the paper’s legal manager Tom Crone, which said Mosley’s attempts to ‘suppress’ the video had ‘failed’.
News.com: Flickr video launch – pleasing but limited
Flickr video has arrived – after what seemed like an age – and CNET’s Dan Farber is impressed with the results, even if users are limited to 90 seconds of videos. Crazy, for my money.
‘It’s the video analog of Twitter, which limits users to 140 characters. It’s a fine communications constraint, but it doesn’t apply as easily to video content,’ says Faber.
While Flickr have been dillydallying, as Faber points out, YouTube has rocketed ahead with its offering.
Stuff magazine to hold Youtube auditions to find new tech reviewers
Stuff magazine has revealed plans to recruit a technology reviewer/presenter for its magazine TV service, Stuff.tv, by holding auditions on Youtube.
Applicants have to upload a two-minute video of themselves reviewing an item of technology to the video-sharing website for a chance to win a six-month presenting contract and a prize of £10,000-worth of home entertainment equipment.
[youtube:http://youtube.com/watch?v=D6Gfjopku9A]Innovations in Journalism – Plumi
We give developers the opportunity to tell us journalists why we should sit up and pay attention to the sites and devices they are working on. Today it’s video sharing software Plumi.
1) Who are you and what’s it all about?
We’re an Australian based non-profit called EngageMedia. We run a video sharing website focused on social and environmental issues in the Asia-Pacific region. To run the site we developed Plumi, a free software video sharing platform based on the Plone content management system.
2) Why would this be useful to a journalist?
Plumi would be useful if you wanted to set up and run your own independent video sharing site with the above features and didn’t want to fork out thousands of dollars for a proprietary system. Plumi is completely free and open source and available to be modified and built upon.
3) Is this it, or is there more to come?
There’s a lot more to come. The platform is in constant development and we’re always looking for new programmers to contribute to Plumi or for projects to take it up to build new video sharing sites.
4) Why are you doing this?
Currently no major video sharing site shares the technology it’s built upon meaning users have to bow to often dubious terms and conditions. Coupled with this is the fact that these sites often make large sums of money they don’t share with their contributors. We believe an independent media requires independent and open source infrastructure that is available for anyone to use.
5) What does it cost to use it?
It’s completely free. You will however need a server to set it up on and a geek who knows how to do this.
6) How will you make it pay?
We receive our funding from philanthropic bodies and donations from users of the system. Reklama: Vadovų ir darbuotojų paieška, personalo atranka bei mokymai Primum Esse We supplement that income by rolling out video sharing sites for clients. Additionally as the system is open source it attracts a wide variety of contributors who add features and fixes voluntarily.
Google launches measurement tool for YouTube videos
Google has launched YouTube Insight – a new measurement tool for YouTube users, which will provide stats on the videos they upload.
According to an announcement on the Official Google Blog, uploaders of videos to the site will be able to see figures and graphs of:
- how often their videos are viewed by geographic region;
- how popular their contributions are compared to other videos in that area;
- ‘the lifecycle of a video’ e.g. how long it takes for a clip to gain popularity.
The metrics, says the blog, makes YouTube ‘one of the world’s largest focus groups’ and could be of use to advertisers and content providers in evaluating the benefits of the platform.
Below is a screenshot of how the figures, which can be seen in the ‘My Account’ section of the site, are displayed:
Washington Post Facebook app attracts 350,000 downloads
Jim Brady, executive editor of Washingtonpost.com, discusses widgets, podcasts, vodcasts and live streaming in the interview with Beet.tv below.
Brady says the Post’s political application on Facebook, which has been downloaded around 350,000 times, was a simple and relatively inexpensive way of promoting the WaPo brand.
However, he says that when experimenting with any new distribution methods – whether widgets, audio or video – it’s crucial to get the editorial content right first, regardless of what technology is in place.
[youtube:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UpWWrFA7Nfw]