I'm
on vacation this week, kicking back at a lake in the beautiful hills of
Arkansas, with my wife and the five children in our extended family.
But I didn't want the blog to go neglected too long ...
On my last assignment before vacation, I covered a celebration U.S. District Judge Wesley Brown,
who is still active at age 100. Judge Brown is quite a character and
still well respected withing the judiciary. But our coverage, when it
extended to the web, worked like we'd all been hoping it would, and
maybe, that the multimedia bug is starting to spread around the
newsroom.
I've received some e-mails since I started this blog
about work flow, and it's something everyone has been struggling over
trying to conquer. One reason, I believe, is because some of us jumped
right on multimedia and embraced it. Others still aren't quite so sure.
That left a few people doing much of the work. But the slide show on Judge Brown shows that all we really need is a little communication and encouragement.
That
morning, I got with Bo Rader of our photo department and began talking
about options for the web component of this story. We agreed that a
crowd of invited guests talking about the celebrated judge might not
make exciting video. But we decided I'd pick up some audio, and we'd
see what kind of pictures we were able to get with an eye on a slide
show.
Jeff Tuttle, our photographer, was wary the quality of
photos once he arrived in a courtroom, where more than 150 people sat
listening to people talk. But by the end of the afternoon, he was more
excited, because Judge Brown had been so animated throughout the event.
The federal court system had taken care of the audio problems,
providing a plug-in box for my recorder. I was just glad I'd brought an
XLR connection.
Jeff processed the pictures, I edited a minute
of audio, and Bo put everything together, coming over to show it to me
on his laptop as I finished up the story. I did the audio first, so I
knew what was going to be in the slide show. That way, I knew I didn't
need to put that in the story. I also selected audio that I thought
showed the judge's personality and sense of humor it a way that
wouldn't come through the printed page.
We worked as a team,
saved time and it came together pretty well on deadline, I thought. At
least, most of us made it home in time for dinner.
I'm still of
the mind that reporters ought to be the ones collecting and editing
audio. I was willing to ditch it if we didn't end up with enough
pictures for a slide show. But that should be the decision of the photo
department. Edit the audio, drop an MP3 into a shared folder, and see
if they can pull together photos to fit. Bo said after he got the audio
clip and photos, it took him about "five seconds" to put it all
together.
That's the way it ought to work.
Now, there's a lake and a boat waiting ...