TV news meets cyberspace: will freewheeling Internet users watch online shows?
Palser, Barb
When newspapers first encountered the Web, their instinct was to do
what they knew: post a complete online "edition" once a day.
They eventually learned that Web users crave rapid-fire updates and a
sense of continual evolution. Now that broadband video is finally a
workable format, TV companies are rushing to apply their own familiar
formulas to the Web, in the form of--what else--online
"shows." But is there an appetite for appointment programming
on the Internet? Thanks to an explosion of online newscasts, we may soon
find out.
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In April, NBC affiliate KPNX in Phoenix launched a three-minute
newscast on AZCentral.com, updated several times each weekday between 6
a.m. and 6 p.m. Offering a brief but well-produced roundup of top
stories, the report is fronted by the TV news team and looks as polished
as anything you'd see on air.
In San Francisco, NBC station KNTV's "Web News On The
Hour" follows a similar TV-like template, though somewhat more
casual and less produced. It's updated hourly between 9 a.m. and 5
p.m. In Birmingham, Alabama, NBC affiliate WVTM's Webcast is
streamed daily at 10 a.m. and 3 p.m. It runs a little longer--5 to 15
minutes--and the programs are archived on the site.
For an avant-garde rendition, see New England Cable News'
"Lunchbox" Web show between 11:30 a.m. and 2 p.m. weekdays.
Hosted by Director of Digital Media Steve Safran before an animated
backdrop of flying sandwiches and milk cartons, the show runs a few
minutes and takes a more irreverent, less formal tone.
Even farther afield from typical TV news fare is Raleigh CBS affiliate WRAL's "live@WRAL.com," which debuted in late
June. The 10-minute show takes a conversational approach to the
day's news; the best action happens when the hosts go mobile and
roam the newsroom talking to station staff at their desks. The show is
Webcast live at 1:15 p.m. and then archived on the site.
We already know Web video works well on demand and during breaking
news. Repurposing broadcast clips is standard practice. So is live
streaming video during major news events, from bombs over Baghdad to the
funeral of Pope John Paul II. There have also been plenty of
mini-documentaries produced exclusively for the Web, and many sites have
provided important Web-only video during severe weather and other
disasters.
But the idea of a hosted Web show, produced every day and available
at appointed times, is radically different and defies conventional
wisdom about Internet culture. Web users are supposed to be autonomous
grazers, choosing the stories they're interested in and the order
in which they read or view them. A talking head reading the news hardly
fits that ethic. The Web is also supposed to be the antithesis of
scheduled programming--it's there when you want it.
That doesn't mean Web shows are destined to fail. Most of the
Webcasts mentioned above remain available for a window of time, some
updated throughout the day. And scheduled Web events aren't totally
unprecedented; washingtonpost.com often touts the success of its online
chats. If the content is good enough, it might work. And heck, why not
try?
"It may flop," wrote New England Cable News' Safran
on the industry blog LostRemote.com. "It's an experiment, and
there is still plenty of news at our site all day, so it's not like
we're making them come for the news when we want them to.
We're trying to hit a target--it's absolutely possible we will
miss."
Newspapers are taking a shot, too. Wilmington, Delaware's News
Journal hired a local TV anchor and launched its twice-daily Webcast in
October. In fact, newspapers could have an advantage in developing
successful Webcast formats because they're starting from scratch.
In the early days of online news, CNN and MSNBC were better than most
newspapers at formatting text stories for the Web because they
didn't have the option of copying an existing product. Broadcasters
know a lot more about video production than print folks, but following
an old-media template makes it easy to gloss over the research and
development process.
So far nobody is boasting about huge numbers for their Webcasts,
but it's too early to make judgments about potential audience or
revenue. At this stage it's enough that newsrooms are testing
concepts.
"The result of all these Webcasts was to 'demystify'
live streaming, where the newsroom came to understand that it was just
like producing an on-air show ... but without the same
restrictions," writes Bonnie Buck, managing editor of NBC4.tv, the
Web site for Los Angeles' KNBC, in an e-mail interview. KNBC's
recent Web specials covered the mayoral election and the Michael Jackson
verdict.
New technology offers newsrooms the opportunity to show how
innovative--or how rigid--they are. Now that we can do almost anything
we want with video on the Web, what will it be?
Note: Three of the stations mentioned in this column--KNTV, WVTM
and WRAL--are partners of Internet Broadcasting, the company I work for.
In each case, the Webcasts were conceived locally and are produced by
the TV stations.
Barb Palser is director of content for Internet Broadcasting
Systems Inc. Her e-mail address is barb@ibsys.com.