Having the time of my life
The edict came down at The Wichita Eagle,
as it did , or will, in newsrooms across the country: you will be
concentrating more on-line the coming year. As the announcement was
made this past November, I saw my colleagues around me, their eyes either glazing over or their faces turning ashen.
No
one really knew what it meant. Would everyone be required to learn to
shoot and edit video? Sound? What would happen to our narratives that
we worked so hard on for print?
I come from a broadcast family. My dad was a news director for a Midwestern
network affiliate in the 1960s. He probably faced some of the same
questions as he decided to buy the station's first sound film camera.
My brother spent several years in radio. I had grown up around people
with microphones, recording and trying to patch together records and
mics that had different plugs. I spent six years as a music journalist,
which took me inside recording studios and watching people mix and mic
live sound. None of this was very intimidating.
I'd been looking for ways to use to web to expand my reporting since about 1999. As a reporter for The News-Leader in Springfield, Mo. I created an investigative piece
on water quality, using statewide databases, and helped build a
component, where residents could enter their zip code and find out what
was in their water. That led to me being contacted by The Eagle and
offered a job as the courts reporter on the crime team. I started
collecting source documents and court exhibits in PDFs so people could see the material I was using to write my stories.
Multimedia
was the next logical step. I 'm on the national board of the Society of
Professional Journalists as a regional director and read an excellent article by Emily Sweeney of the Boston Globe on how to get started.
From there, I searched out others who could teach me: Mindy McAdams at the University of Florida and Richard Koci Hernandez's Multimedia Shooter and blogs by people such as Angela Grant
helped launch me in the right direction. I just met Mindy this weekend
at our National Writers Conference in Wichita and we talked for hours.
Katie Lohrenz, our on-line content developer at Kansas.com, has been encouraging, inspiring, taught me to use I-Movie and final cut and critiqued
videos I have started producing for our web site. She suggested I try a
personal blog to document my learning. We're not a huge newspaper, or a
tiny one, but a medium market Midwest paper smack in the center of the
country. We're learning as we go, as most newsrooms are. Plus, I've
found a lot of blogs come from the perspective of those experienced in
visuals, or experienced videographers.
I've always written and reported through text, and I think moving to
multimedia has unique challenges for those moving from the written word.
Whether
our careers have involved words or pictures to this point, I believe we
are all reporters and storytellers. We all seem to be moving in the
same direction with multimedia, using different tools to tell our
stories..
So I'm jumping into all of this now. I hope people will pick this up and ask questions. I'm learning something new every day.
And I'm having the time of my life. Multimedia has rejuvenated my enthusiasm and excitement in a career I love.
3 comments:
Angela Grant
said...
Ron,
welcome to the wonderful new world of multimedia storytelling! And
blogging your learning experiences is such a great idea. I can't tell
you how much blogging has helped me learn! I'll be keeping an eye over
here. :-)
Mindy McAdams
said...
Hey, Ron, welcome to blogging! I'm going to give you my cardinal rule of blogging: Write short!
Now, go over to my blog and see how long today's post is -- and you can call me a big hypocrite!
Melissa Worden
said...
Ron,
welcome to the blogging world. I've learned so much by writing about my
experiences/experiments, too. It's a great resource. I look forward to
following your progress. :)