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YouTube Live will revolutionise student journalism

Posted by Dave Lee on 5 March 2008 at 09:25
Tags: Courses, Online, Student Journalism, Television

We haven’t touched much on student television journalism on this blog yet, and for good reason.

There isn’t any. Or rather, there isn’t any we can watch and enjoy. Plenty of j-schools have TV modules – some even have dedicated TV courses – but the public enjoyment of this work is often restricted to the campus it is created on.

Which is all well and good, but it puts student broadcast journalists at a distinct disadvantage over their print counterparts. Aspiring TV journalists are not google-friendly. You’d never stumble across a brilliant piece-to-camera by accident. No, you would need to consciously go and download it.

And even if you got to that point, what university has the resources to be hosting all this multimedia? Not to mention the fact that many of the ‘men upstairs’ in British universities quiver in their leather chairs at the very thought of letting student journalists run riot under the university’s good name.

Is that all about to change? Yes! It certainly is! Woo hoo! Hip hip hooray! And so on. With this single announcement, student TV journalism has taken a whole new meaning.

Why? Because soon, this year, we’ll be able to broadcast LIVE using YouTube. To an audience of… millions?

Well let’s not get ahead of ourselves. To go from broadcasting to your classmates and your tutor to speaking to, for example, the local community, is pretty exciting.

Those of us who are lucky enough to have a radio station on-campus will know how much you raise your game when it’s likely to be heard by someone who isn’t just your mate. Knowing your content is up for both legal and critical scrutiny is always healthy as well, as your skills will subconsciously become stronger and the real stresses of journalism will emerge. As will the adrenaline rush, of course.

It’s time, then, for TV tutors out there to ask themselves: “How can we incorporate this?”

Exact details of YouTube’s plans are not clear, but it’s fairly likely that users will be able to embed the live video into their own site, much like the way we do with normal clips now.

If convergence is the way forward – which, let’s face it, it is – then how better to teach multimedia journalism than to create a website that is rammed full of text, images, audio, multimedia and now, gloriously, live television. Every j-school has the resources to do all of this, which means every j-school should do it, no excuses.

When it comes to inspiring great, high quality work, you really can’t get much better than this.

Tags: Courses, Online, Student Journalism, Television

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  1. Dave Lee / jBlog » &hellip |  5 March 2008 at 13:21

    [...] that all about to change? Yes! (Read more…) Tags: Live, Multimedia, My Work, press gazette, Student Journalism, Student Journalism Blog, The [...]

  2. JohnofScribbleSheet |  7 March 2008 at 11:12

    My old university, Warwick, had a TV station that did news etc, they broadcasted on campus, was quit epopular for a while, but don’t know what’s happened to it since. As you say, tv is not google friendly

  3. Greg Linch |  16 March 2008 at 1:40

    YouTube adding live capabilities will be huge. Have you heard of Ustream.tv? It’s a pretty good live webcasting service, but obviously doesn’t have the reach of YouTube.

    My university’s TV station is not bad. They have have a lot of shows archived on their site (umtv.miami.edu) for download and they have the ability to broadcast live online.

    Problem: No one watches.

    The newspaper’s business manager works for the weekly morning show “UMTV Today” and posts his celebrity interviews and other packages on YouTube, where he gets significantly more views.

    Off The Wire, a late night/sketch comedy show is by far the most popular program. It usually draws a crowd to the taping and posts to YouTube as well.

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