Archive for August, 2008

G9 audio examples

I spent most of my time the last week and a half covering the Alaska State Fair for the Anchorage Daily News. I used the Canon HV20 to produce four videos but opted to use the G9 to capture the audio for two audio slide shows.


For this concert by Anchorage musician Jared Woods, I just left the camera on the stage in ’sound recorder’ mode and picked out a section I wanted to use when I got back. While the acoustics in the bar were terrible (which you can certainly hear), I was pleasantly surprised at how the mic auto-leveled (Note: I converted this slide show to a .mov using the SoundSlides plug-in).


On Saturday I covered the 4-H livestock auction, again using the ’sound recorder’ function on the G9. Though my initial plan was to use my M-Audio, I forgot my headphones in the car (BAD PHOTOGRAPHER! NO D90!) and the unit is just complex enough that I didn’t have total confidence in it without a way to check sound. So with G9 in hand again, I recorded the auctioneer (through the loudspeaker) and one of the exhibitors. The barn acoustics were much better, which is obvious in the final product.

Sunday, August 31st, 2008

Enough with the hand-wringing

The bad news continues to roll in for McClatchy and yet I see no signs of meaningful change from the Anchorage Daily News. Enough with the hand-wringing already!

Waiting out the economy is not a strategy.

Letting someone else figure out how to deliver the news and then copying them is not a solution (see: Craig’s List).

Editors, we know it’s bad. What are we going to do about it?

I’m on the new media ground floor, but here’s my list:

::Distribute the new media work load.

I’m not talking about multimedia but content management systems. Newsroom employees must be able to update and maintain the newspaper website 24/7. At the Daily News, we have four people (the online editor, the online producer, our programmer and me, a photographer) with enough training in the CMS to make substantive changes to the homepage. It’s not enough. We have no scheduled coverage on Sundays or after 8pm most days. Teaching key people the CMS is more important than learning to shoot well-produced video (everyone should be able to use a Flip).

::Reorganize the newsroom.

Create a proper online department in the newsroom, reporting to the online editor, complete with reporters and a copy editor. Get them out of the office and reporting live. Train them to update the website. Turn a picture editor into a multimedia editor and have them assign and edit (for quality, length and clarity) video and audio slide shows. Train them to update the website.

Examine the newsroom chain-of-command. Do the branches make sense?

::Provide us with the tools we need to do the job.

We have a good collection of relatively high-end equipment (wireless mics, Canon HV20s etc) but we need to be able to go mobile. In August we were forced to transfer our company cell phones to private accounts. The company pays us a $35/month stipend, which covers the voice plan, but we’re on our own if we want a smart phone, data plan or SMS plan. Needless to say, not many people are opting to spent an extra $30-35/month of their own money on a data plan (especially with our recently announced one year company-wide wage freeze). The Daily News should cover a data plan, at least for the online department.

And buy more Flip cameras so reporters can easily grab video while on assignment (if you think we need video on the site — and we do — the cops reporter at least should have one).

::Plan for the future, with a close eye on current content.

This is not a plea for micro management but for strategic planning.
In the fire service, the command officers manage the incident. They maintain a comprehensive view of the situation and tell their fire officers what they want done (but not how to do it!). The fire officers use their resources to execute the Incident Commander’s strategy.

The IC plans ahead while the officers and firefighters focus on the task at hand.

The same should be true of newspapers: Tell your section editors, reporters and photographers where you want us to go and we’ll figure out how to get there.

Trust us.

Monday, August 25th, 2008

Free video training

Colin Mulvany over at Mastering Multimedia links to what looks like a great Apple tutorial on editing news and sports footage. It’s free, but registration is required.

Thursday, August 21st, 2008

Social networking


Found this two miles up the Reed Lakes trail in Hatcher Pass.

Website tagline:

“Quotes are for assholes and you can quote me on that.”

Monday, August 11th, 2008

Fillet a salmon, Seward style


I shot this short video at the end of a (working!) trip to Seward for a salmon charter. I’ve never seen anyone cut fish so well so fast. I guess if you have to take care of 50+ fish a day you get pretty good at it.

Thursday, August 7th, 2008