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Well, Duh... Why doesn't someone (oh, maybe named "Jim") start a local news text/video site that does BOTH and equally well?
ps. Please make the royalty check out to "Joseph Cascio, Jr.", K? Thx.Bai.
Tim, the more likely scenario is for those above to absorb good ideas and take credit. LOL (KIDDING!!)
thanks guys!
Local media has the resources and the potential to make web 2.0 and social media really work in a true niche market economy, bounded by geography. Its nice to see local papers getting local again. You can read about iraq anywhere but when things go down in your neighborhood there is a truly limited audience.
Still a great article though.
As far as improving the user experience, the voting style of Digg has taken off, but when it is exported to other outlets it doesn't seem to be as popular (see Netscape).
People want something that is straight to the point, not all this filler that the broadcast news has currently. Perhaps a separate video for each story on the websites, instead of re purposing the bloated version for tv would be a viable option for the short attention span of the viewers online.
My sort of solution is to try and create a network based around a physical proximity. Again, I am not doing this well (yet), but the network will be based around a local business and who interacts there. The network will expand (hopefully), but expand through similar physical representations. (picture overlapping circles of regional proximity with an all encompassing circle that represents the platform).
Anyways, just my thoughts and part of my goals for the coming year.
Still most are still failing at creating a sense of community and simply recycling material from offline sources. I know that some companies are having trouble figuring out what they can do, and merely copying others' innovations in hopes of attracting visitors. The big issue here is that if someone else has already done it, they've probably done it better, and have figured out (or are figuring out) all the back-end kinks that come with any innovation.
Overall, I can see a time when local media must find a centralized area online to present their opinions and bend on the world and let users choose what they find important and interesting.
Jon Plummer - that also has the added value of unfiltered market research, not sure I'm seeing the negative effect.
Caffination Paul local media may JUST be the content partner someone like you is looking for. the key is LOCAL content and community. now...can I get a cappucino please? ;-)
Nick Starr I don't disagree with you. i do think news should be just one "bucket" in a local media platform, just as news is just one program on a TV local channel.
From the media perspective it's all about eyeball attention and many of the open source social media apps that are available out there could greatly extend the local TV web sites and bring in more ad revenue.
Eventually they'll adapt.
As much as I enjoy new media content via podcasts, for example, I still have to turn to local news for weather and traffic conditions - because it's real-time.
I've begun tracking job openings for new media in Cincinnati, and I've noticed more and more the openings are for local media outlets.
Being in a university environment, I see lots of reporters go into 'reporting' tracks for newspaper or TV, rarely do they transcend those lines. (unless they're like me and go for a hybrid convergence track). The problem is, despite the writing on the wall, and recent history, they're content with being a traditional reporter even though they know that there is no such thing as a traditional reporter now.
Recent graduatea from the Missouri School of Journalism (where I'm a senior in convergence journalism) have come back and said that EVERY new hire (at least the recent grad hires) at local TV stations are put in charge in some respect of posting news online, it's that FEAR of journalism on behalf of the 'traditional' reporters that drives this I think. The fear in newsrooms of the technology that is moving and shaking local, and dare I say it, hyper-local news is the next step.
Whether its newspaper, tv, or purely community driven journalism, it's the fear of progress and change that's driving me crazy. You don't have to understand how it works to know that it works and to participate.
I've seen a number of local 'news sites', but for the most part, its still just content being delivered to an audience. There's really no attempt at building a community.
If you build it, they will come. It'll be interesting to see if the NBC execs get it, and do it right, or if it will just be another http://ctnow.com/ .
It's not TV broadcast, but it's a small clue that with some technology and ingenuity all things are possible. Local TV lost me years ago. Sad, because I probably don't know nearly enough about what's going on in town. Why did they lose me? Because they they seem to be targeting the lowest common denominator with promos about how they have the "exclusive" dirt on someone or something. The presentation itself smacks of inauthenticity and one-way messaging.
The contrast is even greater if you spend a lot time in online communities where there are quality conversations ongoing. Totally not a broadcast media expert, but I think that asking some "what if" questions as you are, is a good start!
You're right on the money here. Who better to connect people to their immediate surroundings than local media? But, changing broadcasting from a one-to-many medium to a two-way conversation with individuals requires a seismic shift in thinking.
In Canada, national networks are adopting many social tools with polling, rating stories, live streaming, integrated social bookmarking and re-packaging audio and video content as podcasts. But local stations are falling short of the social media mark, barely soliciting for video and photos and fumbling with how to pull it all together to create real value, real dialogue.
In the end, reduced viewership, leading to lowered ad revenues will force some to change and adapt, while others will simply go extinct.
That being said I think there a couple of issues to be considered in the community building aspect of online news orgs. They certainly need to be interactive, as well as engaging, but what hasn't been mentioned in this conversation is diversity. Folks are going to blogs, and alternative news sources that cater to specific interests and information needs. Mass media is exactly that, it attempts to cater to the masses. What we're witnessing, however, is the demassification (sp?) of the media. Sure the mainstream outlets will be able to "own" the big news stories, but we all have individual interests... how can the mainstream be all things to all people, especially online? Plus the news culture is so obsessed with stories that have little impact on our lives. I think ideas that center around public journalism would be most useful to the community, but community stories don't generally attract viewers, or readers. This is getting long, but my last point is that I believe that newspapers are in a much better position to dominate the online landscape. They just need to get the video thing down. If the major print stories would include even a short soundbite in video form online, I believe it would be a big draw. By the way check out WFOR's website. I think they got the video thing right. The flash player/video archive is great. http://cbs4.com/
PEACE Bro Jim!
I really like your blogging style. You go for deip. I know when I stop by, it's going to be something insightful that's going to make me think.