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Elena Sassower, Center for Judicial Accountability, Inc.

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Barry Parr's picture
Submitted by Barry Parr on Thu, 2006-10-26 18:59.

We've been playing around with video quite a bit on Coastsider and I'm discovering there are plenty of interesting things you can do with it on the Web that go beyond what you can do with it on TV, either broadcast news or public access.  You can see some of our work on this page:
  http://coastsider.com/index.php/site/C17/Lately, we've been doing too much public meeting coverage for my taste. If you go further back, you'll see some interesting segments on other topics. 
Are other folks experimenting with video for ultralocal/community/citizen journalism?  I'd like to talk about what we've learned and what we'd like to know.  What is the ideal role for video in this medium?
bp-- Barry Parrhttp://coastsider.com650.523.4929 phone815.572.0794 fax-----------------------------------------

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Using video in community journalism?

WickedLocal.com, a site sponsored by the Plymouth, MA newspaper,
prominently features Wicked Local Girl, a video blog about local...stuff.
The videoblog entry about Punk Rock Yoga is priceless.

Barry Parr wrote:
> We've been playing around with video quite a bit on Coastsider and I'm
> discovering there are plenty of interesting things you can do with it
> on the Web that go beyond what you can do with it on TV, either
> broadcast news or public access. You can see some of our work on this
> page:
>
> http://coastsider.com/index.php/site/C17/
>
> Lately, we've been doing too much public meeting coverage for my
> taste. If you go further back, you'll see some interesting segments on
> other topics.
>
> Are other folks experimenting with video for
> ultralocal/community/citizen journalism? I'd like to talk about what
> we've learned and what we'd like to know. What is the ideal role for
> video in this medium?
>
> bp
>
>
>
> --
> Barry Parr
>
> http://coastsider.com
>
> 650.523.4929 phone
> 815.572.0794 fax
> -----------------------------------------
> ------------------------------------------------------------------------
>

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Using video in community journalism?

>
> Are other folks experimenting with video for
> ultralocal/community/citizen journalism? I'd like to talk about what
> we've learned and what we'd like to know. What is the ideal role for
> video in this medium?

I'm using video more and more both in my professional role (for
Linux.com and NewsForge) and to do little local feature stuff in/around
Bradenton, FL. Here are a couple of URLs that show some of my "on my own
time" experiments:

1. 19 (Video) Glimpses of Bradenton, Florida, on a Sunday Morning -
http://www.roblimo.com/node/141

2. Kaos Gallery - Village of the Arts - Bradenton, Florida -
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MPZT2DZ1nUQ

3. Sarah Meaker’s Three-Part Plan for Manatee County (video) -
http://www.roblimo.com/node/159

I originally started doing video seriously again, after many years of
*not* doing film or video, for my 2004 book, Point & Click Linux, which
included a well-reviewed set of instructional videos on a DVD. In 2005 I
wrote Point & Click OpenOffice.org, with more and better videos. Then I
started doing both instructional and interview (live motion as opposed
to screen capture) vids for Linux.com, and when the site's new design
debuts early next year we'll have at least one set of videos every week.

Meanwhile, on the home front....

My wife and I live in the Village of the Arts in Bradenton, Florida,
which has 35 home-based art studios and other arts-related businesses in
a 4 square mile "overlay" zoning district. (My wife just opened *her*
gallery two weeks ago!) Anyway, we were visiting a neighbor, Valeri, and
I had a new camcorder with me, so just for fun I shot and edited this
and uploaded it to a couple of the free online vidhosts:
http://www.roblimo.com/node/132

That sucker has gotten some thousands of (cumulative) pageviews across
the various hosts, and Valeri says it's brought her at least $3000 in
business.

My next online home video was this turkey: http://www.roblimo.com/node/133

Some of my online videos have had 20,000+ views, and several have been
linked from Digg & Slashdot.

I'm now doing little videos about all 35 Village studios and galleries,
one by one. The latest: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IatYTMk55ck

It's sort of sad that broadcast-quality video (shot with a Sony HC1),
complete with surround-sound stereo, looks and sounds so lousy on
YouTube; it's sort of where I post "drafts," with size-constrained
Google vids as my favorite link-to freebie hosting service. Also
experimenting with a "beta" version of Lulu.tv - Lulu is run by some old
friends of mine...

At least with Flash, which all the new-gen free vidhosts use, you get
fast buffering so your stuff starts playing right away.

Anyway, here's the meat:

I can now produce 3-5 minute "mini-infomercials" for small business for
next to nothing, like well under $500, which is less than the monthly
charge for a 1/4 page ad in the local Yellow Book, and less than 1/10
the cost of a minimal one-week campaign on local cable TV.

So I have an accidental business here, just registered as Internet Video
Promotion, Inc.

My total equipment and software investment is under $2000, and I've made
it back *on weekends* already without trying. Note that the videos I
linked to above were "no charge" deals, but the real estate stuff (oh,
Realtors love this!) is paying the freight.

Those of you who follow such things know that the reason my employer,
OSTG (divison of VA Software, LNUX on NASDAQ), leaves me alone to work
at home 3000 miles from corporate HQ and more or less do whatever I want
is that my part of the company consistently get more pageviews per
dollar spent and generates more revenue per editorial dollar than darn
near any content site on the WWW. And yes, the sites I run are
consistently profitable.

Now I'm applying my same better-faster-cheaper methodology to "citizen
journalism" video production. And bein' as I don't got no college or
foundation grants to pay for my work, I'm answering the, "But how will
we support our citizen journalism efforts?" question (asked by the
Little Red Hen, among others) by building the revenue (advertising) side
before putting much effort into the news side.

I have now tested literally every piece of sub-$300 video editing
software out there, and have tried 8 different camcorders. I've
researched shooting styles, editing styles, and sources for royalty-free
music.So fine. I am now probably the world's leading expert on
ultra-low-cost "Internet Video" production. I'm also testing every free
video hosting service there is...

...and even though that study is not complete, it's already obvious to
me that I need something better than the freebies. I'll still use Flash,
because it's the most bandwidth-efficient way there is to deliver video
over the Internet and offers a streaming effect -- vids start playing
before the d/l is complete -- without the expense/hassle of actual
streaming servers or concurrent connection limits, but I need to deliver
richer, higher-clarity Flash video than the freebies in order to compete
with TV/cable on the ad side, not to mention that I want my feature (and
eventually news) vids to look and sound nice, too.

So my friend Brice and I are working on a premium video hosting service
that's cheap to operate -- as in cheap enough that we (and
affiliates/franchisees if we go that route) can charge ad clients as
little as $10/month to deliver a spot up to 5 minutes long to as many as
10,000 viewers -- and have money in the kitty to deliver at least as
many minutes of news/feature videos as ad videos. And, of course, we can
always ask ad clients to kick in a little extra to sponsor local
news/feature videos, right?

Right now we're non-frantically building not only the hosting service,
but also an online business infrastructure including billing and
searchable (as in search engine-friendly) text "wrapper" pages for our
ad clients. By doing it as a mass thing instead of a whole lot of
independents each trying on their own, we can not only keep server bills
way low but can also eat up search engine categories because we'll get
lots more incoming links to our "mass" site than any local site could
possibly get on its own, and in an age of searches and RSS, with "front
page loyalty" gradually going away, this is a big deal.

Yeah, I'm going to try for some money from the Knight Foundation, except
the forms on their News Challenge Site --
http://www2.knightfdn.org/newschallenge/image_noFlash.html -- don'tseem
to work with Linux, and I haven't had time to fill all that stuff out
again with my one Windows puter. And meanwhile, I might just find money
elsewhere or even just do this thing without money as a bootstrapped
operation.

If you want to join in this whatever-it-is on whatever level, let me
know off-list. My current thrust is not only to improve my own video
skills, but to get everything systematized so that I can pass it all on
to others.

Robin 'Roblimo' Miller
Editor in Chief, OSTG
http://roblimo.com

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Be the Media conference

Hi folks:
I just happened to hear of a small conference in Boston called "Be the
Media."
http://www.onesignatanach.com/bethemedia/
Sounds like something folks on the list and in New England might be
interested in attending.
BTW, can anyone tell me where they've seen this announced. I saw it
mentioned on the small Boston 501 tech club list, but assume that there
must be more active lists on which this has been advertised, and would
be interested in learning of those lists. Thanks for any help.
Best,
Christian Nelson

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