Project Storyboard

7 03 2011

NAMI History Multimedia Project

Our project’s goal is to recover NAMI Northern Virginia history and present it interactively. We will conduct interviews with past board members, do research about the institution, and gather information about its history. We will be using different online platforms to organize and present the information.
Our project will be constructed around an interactive timeline. We’ll be using dipity to create it. We’re planning to use YouTube to post our videos, but they also will be linked to the timeline.  We will use batchgeo to create a Google map, and point the locations and programs offered by NAMI Northern Va. The map will be linked to the timeline. Slideshows, scanned documents, and other images will also be linked. We will use social media to disseminate the information we produced, and to reach out to NAMI NOVA already established audience on Facebook.

My role within the project is to create the timeline. I will gather all the information about the organization’s history and bring it all together to be put in a horizontal timeline dating from NAMI NOVA’s creation to its current state. I will do most of the research but other members of the group will also do some research and send it to me to put into the timeline. I will also be assisting with the writing component and social media.




Guest speaker: Jon DeNunzio

3 03 2011

For those of you who do not know who Jon DeNunzio is, check out my other blog, upper90.onmason.com to find out more about him and his background from my other class he spoke to.

Now that you’ve (hopefully) checked that out, we can move on to the good information he gave to our class today.

He introduced us to UMapper, Blackbird Pie, Intersect

Why do we use social media?

  • It’s where users are
  • It helps our reporting
  • It allows us to build a relationship with users — people want to talk back to you!

Third-party platforms: Not the only way!

  • Social part is more important than the medium — be social!

Examples of being social:

  1. Running a poll
  2. Pay attention to the comments
  3. Ask for ideas
  4. Add a user photo gallery
  5. Host a debate
  6. Answer user questions
  7. Use the knowledge of the crowd

Why is all this important?

  • Social media is a growing industry and the ability to connect with users can help you get ahead in this type of business
  • People are starting up sites every day

Allourideas.org, twiigs, startupli.st — sites that are great with social media




C-SPAN: Dan Rather and Tucker Carlson

2 03 2011

On November 22, 1963, the tragic assassination of President John F. Kennedy was first reported by then-CBS Evening News anchor Dan Rather and only a handful of other journalists – at least when compared to the amount of coverage it would have received in today’s internet-driven world.

During his time on C-SPAN, Rather explained that coverage of the event would be all over computers as soon as it happened. Bloggers would be blogging. Tweeters would be tweeting. And the internet, which has become the dominant place of information, would be jam-packed with facts, thoughts and opinions about JFK’s assassination.

At the time of Teddy Roosevelt’s presidency during the early 1900’s, people of the world were living their lives around the radio.

Since then, JFK was president during the transformation to television and now, with technology constantly evolving, President Barack Obama is the first to rule the United States during the internet age.

Rather has noticed these trends in America and around the world as reporting and journalism continually transforms throughout the ages.

At the time of Kennedy’s assassination, Rather noted that television and radio were the only channels of communicating this tragic event to the public. The channels of information were much fewer and narrower at that time than today.

And with these fewer channels, people relied so much on the way the news was reported on television. The death of JFK was such a huge deal around the world and so much was being put on reporters such as Rather to report the news in an unbiased way.

It’s “important for young journalists when something like this happens [to know] that it is such a hammer to the heart for the country as a whole,” said Rathers, who was thrust on the spot to report the crisis, “and these things don’t happen so as a professional, you are hit with the same emotions as everyone else. ‘Who did this?’ But as a professional, you need to seal out own emotions and focus on the job at hand.”

This ability to focus on one specific task and “zone out” the rest is something Rather needed to do throughout his journalism career. He made it a habit of getting in, getting the facts and reporting the story for the public the way he thought it should be reported – as honest as possible.

“I will do my best to set aside my prejudices as possible and give you as close to the truth as possible no matter what,” Rather said.

When covering the White House, Rather made certain he had a “steel spine and backbone,” not caring about what anyone inside the White House thought about him. He just got the facts out for the public as truthfully as possible.

Tucker Carlson, editor-in-chief of The Daily Caller, was also on hand with Rather during the discussion on C-SPAN. He noted that those with authority were much more adept at cowering reporters and getting their spin on what reaches the public. But to become a true journalist, you must be willing to take on people in authority.

Rather jumped in with Carlson on this topic, explaining that news is something people need to know that somewhere somebody doesn’t want them to know (particularly someone in power).

But to make sure a journalist is on the right track, they must be curious, determined and have the ability to write well, according to Rather.

Without these three characteristics, it will be difficult to become the same type of journalists that Rather and Carlson have been throughout their professional careers.




JournalismNext (7): Making Audio Journalism Visible

1 03 2011

Audio journalism — Why is it important?

Audio can build a more textured, layered experience for the audience.

As a writer/reporter, you must make the audience feel a part of what you are covering. Show. Don’t tell.

Three characteristics of audio journalism that are also important:

  1. Presence — On location, a reporter can literally bring readers to the story. The simple fact of being there boosts credibility and interest.
  2. Emotions — Tone of voice, expressions, intonations and pauses — in the words of either the reporter or the sources–can enhance the message.
  3. Atmosphere — Natural sound helps pull the listener in close. Weather sounds, crowd sounds, machine noises are all forms of natural sound in the particular setting.

How news organizations use audio:

  • Reporter overview — Newspapers post quick, simple audio overviews that accompany reporters’ articles.
  • Podcasts — Regular episodes on a selected subject help build an audience. They can be time-consuming and difficult to establish in the beginning.
  • Audio slide shows — Photojournalists have discovered the power of adding audio to their images to help tell a richer, more enhancing story.
  • Breaking news — A reporter can now file a quick audio report from anywhere by mobile phone to be published on the Web.

Getting started with audio:

Plan and prepare your voice contribution and the rest should come much easier.

  • Interviews
  1. Choose your location
  2. Gather natural sound
  3. Prepare your subject
  4. Watch what you say
  5. Try delayed recording
  6. Mark the best spots
  • Doing voice-overs:
  1. Write a script
  2. Warm up
  3. Find operative words
  4. Keep it conversational

To get started with audio journalism, you must get a digital recorder. Here are some tips on what type to choose at different price ranges:

Under $100:

$150-$200

$250-$500

Once this is all taken care of, the next thing to do is vodcasting.

Video + podcasting = vodcasting!