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unmediated

 

August 22, 2005

WKRN in Nashville is soliciting video from its audience and training locals, according to Broadcasting and Cable.

In July, it hosted 20 area bloggers, including Chenoweth, for a crash course in video production. At the workshop, station photographers gave instruction on basic videography and critiqued the students' work. "The biggest problem is that people shoot great images but it's shaky and they zoom in and out," says Terry Heaton, a TV-news consultant working with WKRN. "If they find themselves in a spot-news situation, we want it to be usable."

The workshop also gives WKRN a chance to screen bloggers as potential sources. "We've started relationships with them," says station President Mike Sechrist.


ile, is also planning on incorporating local contributors into its newsroom, B&C says. Under a new pilot program, the broadcaster is launching 60 stations and plans to have community reporters generate one-fifth of the content.

(My favorite quote from the article:

"Another dilemma, news managers say, is that overly eager people could become community paparazzi, getting too close to victims or disrupting police work. “In television, we have sensibilities about shooting video,” says TV-news consultant Valerie Hyman. “We mute the sound or shoot from far away. People in the general public have none of that discussion—and who would expect them to? They’re not journalists."
-kc.)