Multimedia Minutes: How to Use a Hidden Camera
Although few reporters and photographers are given the time for hidden camera investigative reporting, viewers find them quite valuable. Here’s a good example.
MULTIMEDIA MINUTES
Check out “Recent Posts” to the right for storytelling tips for multimedia media journalists. They take only a couple of minutes to watch or read. You can implement what you learn quickly. Send us your comments or roadblocks.
With more than 80,000 hits on this blog over seven months from as far as China, Russia, India, Great Britain, and Australia, it’s obvious that the need for multimedia training is huge. We’re happy this blog helps.
From Ken Kobre, photojournalism professor at San Francisco State University and author of Photojournalism: The Professional’s Approach:
http://kobrechannel.blogspot.com/2009/10/free-tips-from-bob-kaplitzs-multimedia.html
Free Tips from Bob Kaplitz’s Multimedia Minutes
Bob Kaplitz is a principal and senior strategist for Audience Research & Development (AR&D), a TV news marketing firm which he joined in 1980 after a distinguished career in broadcast journalism, which included reports on the CBS Evening News.
He’s created a slew of excellent short instructional videos that offer tips for improving your video. He offers these “Multimedia Minutes” on his blog.
What makes them especially valuable is that Kaplitz uses actual footage from pros, and has annotated it with superimposed text that crisply points out the attributes and deficits of various aspects of the video and audio, as you’re looking and listening to it.
It’s like having the teacher right there at your side, critiquing it as you watch.
Among his topics:
* How to Use a Hidden Camera
* Creatively Shooting Your Own Standups
* How to Take Control of a Story
* The Most Important Word in Storytelling
* So You Want to Save the Best for Last?
* How to Spice Up a Story
* How to Use Words Sparingly
* Shooting Your Own Standups
* How to Shoot a Story that’s Tough to Shoot
* Asking Better Questions with Facts
* How to Lure Viewers and Hold Them
* Action-Reaction Approach to Strong Storytelling
* From Ho-Hum to Engaging Storytelling
* A Lesson Thanks to Jay Leno & Kanye West
This entry was posted on Wednesday, October 7th, 2009 at 4:05 pm and is filed under broadcast journalism, Multimedia Journalism, Power Tools for TV Journalists, TV news training. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.
