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@DNA2008: Sky News to embed SkyCast video sharing tool

Posted by Martin Stabe on 4 March 2008 at 09:21
Tags: Sky, Sky News, Sky.com, User-Generated Content, skynews, video

Sky News plans to embed a white-label version of Sky’s video sharing tool, SkyCast, into news pages on to encourage user submissions of video.

Sky News associate editor Simon Bucks noted the move in a panel on user-submitted content at the DNA conference in Brussels today.

Sky News already has a still photo sharing section on its web site called YourPhoto.

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@Society of Editors - Simon Bucks: Grow membership in broadcast and online

Posted by Martin Stabe on 6 November 2007 at 11:52
Tags: Sky, Sky News, Sky.com, Society of Editors, Society of Editors, skynews

The new president of the Society of Editors, Sky News associate editor for online, Simon Bucks, has delivered his inaugural address, the last event of the conference.

Bucks, who earlier this year publically recanted his skepticism about the value of interactive journalism, says online has “most of the fun of television, although you don’t have to dress up for it.”

“I’m a fan of news on every platform, not least print,” he stresses (before taking a quote from Wired magazine just a bit out of context when he says: “newspapers are silent, highly portable, require neither power source nor arcane commands, and don’t crash or get infected”).

Bucks says he wants is presidency to be marked by growth in membership, particularly in broadcast and online.

If you need to justify your Society subs, Bucks says, just point to the successful campaign against the Freedom of Information and coroners’ courts changes, which the Society won. It also had an important role in fighting the IRB’s coverage of the Rugby World Cup.

He warns that the next media freedom threat in the coming year might be the European Commission’s efforts to regulate online video. The directive on audiovisual services, formerly Television Without Frontiers, would make any linear TV offering over IP subject to regulation. Neither Ofcom or the Culture minister are seeking to regulate the web, but Tony Blair had before leaving office, suggested that convergence could mean a uniform system of media regulation.

Expect a session on that next year.

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@Society of Editors - Football economics coming to online journalism salaries?

Posted by Martin Stabe on 6 November 2007 at 11:14
Tags: Guardian Media Group, Mail on Sunday, Sky, Sky News, Sky.com, Society of Editors, Society of Editors, Telegraph Media Group, Telegraph.co.uk, Times Online, telegraph

The final session of the conference is “The Future is ours: 2020 Vision”, which is billed as “lifting the covers on editors’ crystal balls”.

Appropriately, the panel will be chaired by Martin Stanford, presenter of Sky.com News, the rolling news channel’s interactive programme which covers the most popular stories and debates on the web. He reveals the the Madeleine McCann story has constantly lead Sky news traffic, regardless of what else is going on. Meanwhile, the revelation that the home secretary smoked cannabis, which was a massive story everywhere else, “scored an absolute zero”.

Anne Spackman, editor-in-chief of Times Online, says the paper has been digitising its archive, which will add 20 million items to its website, which already has 750,000 “bits of content” at any one time. It is noticable how litttle the publication has changed over the first 200 years, she says, but the pace of change has increased dramatically.

Her most startling prediction for the future is the rise of football economics in journalism. Spackman describes a “Drogba effect” where pay in journalism will be greatly skewed towards stars who are able to bring in a lot of traffic online.

Spackman repeats her comments from last week about the type of journalists she is seeking to recruit for Times Online: “The people who are by far the most valuable are those who combine journalism skills with real technical skill.”

Her prediction for 2020 reflects her view that many people with these attributes are currently men: “I think this will be an industry rather more full of men than it is now.”

Mark Dodson, chief executive of GMG Regional Media, which includes the host Manchester Evening News, says things have changed dramatically in this sector. Cover prices were static for years, and companies relentlessly measured themselves against the semi-annual ABC figures. That has all changed recently, with the introduction of part-free distribution and new online products.

“Video will be a key aspect of every web site we produce,” Dodson says.

Will Lewis, editor-in-chief of the Telegraph Group, outlines the trends he expects in the next few years:

  1. Localisation - Good news for the regional press, because there will be greater focus on customising news by location.
  2. Personalisation - Mobile and other personal gateways will become the preferred medium tailored to the individuals
  3. Enablers - Rather than handing down pearls of wisdom, and will provide practical help and user-generated
  4. Double media - Video and text will not be enough. They want to read as the watch.
  5. Customer obsessiveness - It is no longer a secret what our readers actually want. We will sell more papers where people now shop. “Our customers will be as much outside the UK as within it,” he concludes.

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Norwich journalist relaunches self-published football site

Posted by Martin Stabe on 2 July 2007 at 18:08
Tags: Archant, BBC, Rick Waghorn, Sky, Sport

Rick Waghorn, the ex-Norwich Evening News football correspondent who set out on his own online after being made redundant, has relaunched his website in the the first step of a plan to take his solo-publishing model nationwide.

Last year, Waghorn used a redundancy payout to set up a web site to cover Norwich City FC, the same patch he had covered for the Evening News.

Now Waghorn has moved his site, which had been located at RickWaghorn.co.uk, to NorwichCity.MyFootballWriter.com.

The new site has scrapped it’s mobile WAP service in favour of mobile Internet browsing. Beginning next month it will offer a subscription service that will provide full access to the site for £1.50 per month. The site also aggregates news feeds from the BBC Sport, Sky Sports and Archant’s local sports web site the Pink ‘Un,. A podcast is also in the works.

In April, Waghorn said he is hoping to franchise his model of solo-publishing regional sports journalism to cover other football clubs in the same way.

“There are about 40 or 50 regional newspaper football writers who have covered clubs for years and have strong personal brands,” he said in April.

“If you go through all the provincial clubs in the country, they’ve all got one of me at their local morning or evening paper.”

Waghorn said today that he remains in talks with other members of “the pack” of regional football writers.

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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.

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ESPN sports network to launch in UK

Posted by Martin Stabe on 27 February 2006 at 10:26
Tags: Journalism, Sky, Sport

In a major challenge to Sky Sports, Disney will today launch a UK version of ESPN, the cable sports news channel that has over 90 million subscribers in the United States.

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Sky journalists in RAF plane drama over Olympics

Posted by Caitlin Pike on 22 February 2006 at 14:56
Tags: Olympics, Sky

Sky News' Jonathan SamuelsSky News reporter Jonathan Samuels and cameraman Neil Morris found themselves fearing for their lives when the RAF plane they were reporting from on 10 February caught fire over the Italian Dolomites and was unable to make an emergency landing.

Samuels and Morris were thrilled to have been invited onboard an RAF AWACS early-warning aircraft which was patrolling the skies above the winter games to search for any terrorist activity.

Samuels (pictured) said: “It was meant to be an eight hour mission circling over the Turin Olympic site as the opening ceremony got underway with Cherie Blair and Laura Bush in attendance. It turned out to be a completely different story — a terrifying drama at 30,000 feet as the plane caught fire.�?

(more…)

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