Main Page Content:
ITNRSS feed
-

Edinburgh: ‘IPod moment’ could render print extinct, predicts Guardian editor

Posted by Colin Crummy on 25 August 2007 at 16:33
Tags: Channel 4, E-paper, Edinburgh 2007, Edinburgh International Television Festival, Guardian, ITN, Journalism, Podcasting

The newspaper industry could be rocked by its own “iPod moment” where a device reads text so well that renders print extinct, according to the editor of The Guardian.

At a session entitled “Who’ll Win the Web?” at the Edinburgh International Television Festival, Alan Rusbridger said: “For the newspaper there will be an iPod moment where someone creates a device that is so brilliant at reading text, the newspaper becomes irrelevant.”

Rusbridger also said the death of The Guardian in print would “in some ways make life simpler” and said that he was confident his team would continue to produce the product within the same Guardian spirit elsewhere. “I’d be quite relaxed about it,” he added.

He admitted that The Guardian was tying up people experimenting with podcasts that gained few listeners but said it was because the newspaper was experimenting with everything. “There’s a fair amount of wasted effort at the moment but we’re learning all the time.”

The debate centred on whether print media or broadcasters might prosper in the digital age.

Rod Henwood, new business director at Channel 4 said: “In some ways we are less threatened than newspapers because free broadcasters don’t have paying customers to lose. We have paying customers to gain through the internet.”

He said that broadcasters could better retain exclusivity on products in a way that news providers could not. “News is very much commodised on the net. Immersive, long form video entertainment is harder to commodise. For broadcasters that have got rights that are their own, have a chance to stand out on the internet more than purely news providers.”

ITN chief executive Mark Wood said newspapers were more than just news and it was crucial to make those elements – like lifestyle sections - pay in a multimedia strategy.

Rusbridger said: “The BBC, CNN, ITN – it’s sort of an article of faith that they are impartial and unbiased. We can be as impartial and biased as we like and on comment is free we have thousands of robust opinions.” He foresaw this as “an interesting battleground” which would be partly settled by regulator.

-

Telegraph and ITN extend online video deal

Posted by Martin Stabe on 24 August 2007 at 14:33
Tags: Brightcove, ITN, ITN On, Telegraph.co.uk, video

ITN has extended its agreement with the Telegraph Media Group to supply video for Telegraph.co.uk.

As part of the new agreement, ITN’s multimedia division, ITN On, will launch a Telegraph rolling news programme in early September.

Another new show, On This Day, will use archive video footage to recount an event from history that took place each day of the year. Additional programmes — in the arts, fashion and travel — will be launched on Telegraph.co.uk by end of the year, according to an ITN news release.

ITN will also continue to make video programmes for the Telegraph site, including the weekly Fantasy Football Friday and the daily Business Show.

The Telegraph-ITN video service uses technology from Brightcove, which has been expanding its presence in the UK, including the recent launch of a UK office.

ITN On also supplies video for Mirror.co.uk.

-

Snow: Citizen media only a threat to bad journalism

Posted by Martin Stabe on 27 March 2006 at 11:10
Tags: Citizen journalism, Guardian, ITN, Journalism

Jon Snow says user-generated content is democratising journalism and will help “professionalise professional media”.

The Channel 4 presenter was speaking on a panel about user-generated content at the Guardian’s Changing Media Summit. Also on the panel were Guardian Unlimited editor Emily Bell, Virgin Radio chief executive Fru Hazlitt, and blogger Ben Hammersley, who led development of the Guardian’s new blog Comment is free.

“I have no problem with it at all. I see it as a completly liberating formula,” said Snow, who described the many tips he was getting from the hundreds of e-mails he recieves every day, such as low-level Whitehall officials who had leaked details of suspect peerages. He described viewers’ reponses as “golddust flying our way” with the biggest problem being how to sort theough the volume of information being supplied.

Facilitating feedback and transparency has helped democratise journalism, Snow argued: “You begin to look back on what you were doing and you think it was so undemocratic, it was so unresponseive, it was so arrogant.”

Journalism, he argued, can no longer be one-way street, he said, adding that there are still too many columnists who fail to supply their e-mail addresses at the foot of their pieces.

Snow also suggested that citizen journalism would force professional journalists to raise their standards.

Snow said that “much professional journalism was not very professional to begin with”, and that citizen journalists would help to “professionalise professional journalism” by exposing unprofessional media practices.

“There are a whole lot of people who entered journalism 25 years ago that no longer will be there,” he said. The endemic alcoholism of Fleet Street, he said, would no longer be acceptable today.

The only people who should feel threatened by citizen media are mediocre professionals, agreed Hammersly.

Describing the early experience of Comment is Free, Hammersley said: “A lot of the user generated content is almost as good as the lower end of the professional comment. If you’re not very good, you’re kind of screwed, because if otherwise the audience is better than you.

Editors would soon begin questioning the high salaries of columnists who offer material no better than what some of the best bloggers are offering, Hammersley predicted.

-

Citizen journalism guide in Press Gazette

Posted by Martin Stabe on 23 March 2006 at 10:17
Tags: BBC, CNN, Citizen journalism, ITN, Journalism, Mobile Phones, Photography, Sky

If you are interested in “citizen journalism” (or whatever you prefer to call
the many-faceted phenomenon) will enjoy the issue of Press Gazette that is out today.

Our Reporter’s Guide to Citizen Journalism is introduced by Mike Ward of the University of Central Lancashire, who argues that professional news organisations cannot afford to ignore citizen journalism. Julie Tomlin interviewed citizen journalism doyen Dan Gillmor. Graham Holliday explained how journalists can make the best use of the blogosphere. I paid a visit to the dedicated BBC unit that sifts through the deluge of “user-generated content”. Jonathan Munro of ITV, John Ryley of Sky News related their experiences of using content supplied by the cameraphone-wielding public, while Nic Robertson of CNN wrote about using a cameraphone to report from Iraq. Kyle McRae recounts the early days of his citizen journalism picture agency Scoopt, and how it has made few friends on tabloid feature desks.

For the uninitiated, we also have some links to notable citizen journalism projects
and social news aggregators and bookmarking tools.

-

It’s Snow Joke for funky attire

Posted by Lou Thomas on 13 March 2006 at 10:28
Tags: ITN, Journalism, Television

We know he’s one of the most respected journalists/presenters in the UK but how much Jon Snow is too much?

Yes, the great man is lined up to present the British Press Awards and has just been in Iran with Channel Four. But now he’s joined such luminaries as Che Guevara, Tony Montana in Scarface and Mr T by having his familar countenance plastered over some cool clobber.

Next week’s t-shirt icon: Huw Edwards.

-

Hacks making history

Posted by Lou Thomas on 21 February 2006 at 18:24
Tags: BBC, ITN, Television

Veteran news presenters don’t retire, they just present history programmes. We’ve had Jeremy Paxman tearfully delving into his own past on Who do you think you are, John Suchet presenting a show about classical composers (well, they’re dead so it must count as history) and now David Dimbleby banging on about old buildings.

Should we expect Natasha Kaplinsky on Time Team in a few years?

E-mail Newsletter Signup

Weekly bulletins