“At War” Trailer 3

David Leeson and Scott Kesterson have posted their third trailer for “At War“, a heartrending and powerful look at the cost of war on everyone involved. The film is due for a January 2008 release. I’m in Dallas to interview David as part of my research on the changes facing photojournalism today and how we [...]

Barefoot Workshops: Documenting the Mississippi Delta

In February 2008 the Barefoot Workshops, run by Chandler Griffin, will hit the Mississippi Delta. This is a 2-week workshop designed for new documentary filmmakers who want to start a career in film and television documentary. Chandler Griffin runs the Barefoot Workshops, a a New York City-based not-for-profit 501(c)3, that offers short, intensive workshops around [...]

Deborah Scranton Talks About “War Tapes” at TED

Filmmaker Deborah Scranton talks about and shows clips from her documentary The War Tapes in this video from TED. She put video cameras in the hands of Charlie Company, a unit of the National Guard, for one year in Iraq. The soldiers footage and diaries tell a very personal story of the war [...]

“At War”: Documentary Filmmaking at its Best

Check out Scott Kesterson and David Leeson’s excellent work on a feature length film, “At War“, based on Scott’s documentary footage shot in Afghanistan over a one year embed. David Leeson is editing the film now and has completed a few trailers that can be viewed on the site. Scott is an interesting story, [...]

Newspapers Must Change to Survive

From a recent article by Tim Rutten on LA Times.com, “Newspapers are changing to suit reader’s tastes,” he laments the lack of quality news programming on cable and network news, but holds out hope that newspapers can make the transition back to their roots rather than fall prey to the type of programming we see [...]

OJR Creates Guide to Website Usability Testing

The Online Journalism Review just published a five step guide for website usability testing that can gauge readers’ reactions to multimedia projects and website design. A very solid guide to making sure that what you produce actually reaches and communicates with your audience.
OJR’s ‘five guide’ to do-it-yourself website usability testing
Use these steps, and these forms, [...]

JayCut Online Flash Video Mixer

I haven’t used online video editors before but JayCut’s flash uploader was easy to use and supported video, photo, and audio in multiple formats. To add clips, music, transitions, or effects to the time line I just placed them into the editor. Once the files were uploaded they were converted to flash for the editor [...]

American Journal Showcases Photojournalism

American Journal, an online magazine published monthly by American Journal Publishing, has some great content. They are also always looking for more. This would be another outlet for stories that may have been sidelined in some way, but that you want to still present to a major audience. The one thing I didn’t see was [...]

Buffalo Rising: Successful Hyperlocal Media

From Josh Cantone at Read/Write Web, Buffalo Rising is quickly becoming one of the more successful hyperlocal media sites, with more than a 10% growth rate each month. Their site is very well designed and uses video and other multimedia very well. They are also going to produce a print product in the future which [...]

Take a Break All You Ducks

For you bloggers out there – take a break! Another great What the Duck cartoon from Aaron Johnson

E&P Picks Roanoke Times as No. 4

Every year Editor & Publisher selects the top newspapers that have. “…through excellence or innovation, shown the way in one area or another, such as news coverage, circulation, design, diversity or online.” The Roanoke Times was lauded for their coverage of the Virginia Tech shootings. The paper used its Web site to get out images [...]

Glaser’s Top Ten Reasons For a Bright Future in Journalism

Recently, Mark Glaser on PBS’s Mediashift blog wrote about the 10 Reasons There’s a Bright Future for Journalism. Make sure and read the entire article, but one thing I come away with is that access and the shift of power from the few to the many in the form of citizen journalism is the driving [...]

Convergence Culture: Where Old and New Media Collide

This is an excellent read from Henry Jenkins. The book makes excellent points on the change in power structures between producers and consumers. Media power is no longer just in the hands of those with a printing press and a platform.
From the Introduction: Don’t expect the uncertainties surrounding convergence to be resolved anytime soon. We [...]

Thinking About New Technology

In a recent piece by Alex Iskold on “The Physics of the iPhone” on Read/WriteWeb, which is a follow up to a recent article, Iskold says that:
“The iPhone is not only a breakthrough handheld device, it is a device that brings a mesh of digital and physical to the masses. Apple achieved it by turning [...]

Asap and Visual Journalists

In this interview by the Online Journalism Review’s Sandeep Junnarkar of Ted Anthony, the founding editor of AP’s new asap multimedia news portal, Anthony talks about how the new portal was staffed and the importance of visual communicators to the entire process. “I have always believed that the visual specialists in the newsroom are as [...]

Citizen Journalism: Making it Work

Rory O’Conner on AlterNet recently wrote about a meeting in Seoul, South Korea, of citizen journalists sponsored by OhmyNews.com. Coming out of that meeting was the realization that the opportunities for citizen journalists are in place, but that content management and editorial accountability are the largest hurdles to overcome. Professional news organizations are starting to [...]