Live Blogging
Damian Radcliffe
@damianradcliffe
5th October 2015
This week…. Live reporting/blogging
Definitions
Andy Bull: http://www.multimedia-journalism.co.uk/node/1598
“I see live blogging as more of a curatorial task – one done by a
journalist at a desk, tapping in to a wide range of sources for a story.
Live reporting denotes to me that a journalist is on the ground, filing
text, stills and perhaps audio and video, where possible, from the
location of a developing story.”
Definitions (cont)
“Often the two come together – and you get one or more reporters
out in the field, and one or more editors or curators putting a live blog
together from their output, and that of others.
These livesifting a wide range of potentially curatable content from
official sources bloggers will be, other media outlets, eye-witnesses and
those using social media – Twitter, Facebook and the rest – to add their
coverage and comment on a story.”
Ways it can work
• Live tweeting
• Live blogging
• Curation e.g. using Storify
• Periscope
Multple tools and ways to do it
• WordPress plugin
• Tumblr
• Everybit, Storify et al
• Snapchat Stories
• Live Tweet
• Video stream e.g. Periscope
• CoverItLive
Why do it? (1)
“It's a form that's charming in its directness; at its
best it generally does away with any writerly
conceits, and demands the author just get on
with telling you what's just happened."
Neil McIntosh, the online editor of the Wall Street Journal Europe
http://www.theguardian.com/media/2011/mar/28/live-blogging-transforms-journalism
Why do it? (2)
TheStreet’s technology editor Chris Ciaccia said he enjoys live blogging
for two primary reasons.
First, live blogs allow him to get commentary and analysis out in real
time without having to go through editors or updating a time stamp.
And second, he believes live blogs are an easier format to read once
the event has ended, particularly for readers who only want a snippet
of the day’s news.
http://talkingbiznews.com/2/why-tech-journalists-love-live-blogging/
Why do it? (3)
"It feels like a type of news reporting that is
emerging as being native to the web.
Most video news on the internet is essentially the same kind of
package that you'd produce for TV, most audio the same as you'd
produce for radio, and most text-based news could be printed out.
The emerging live blog style isn't any of those things."
Martin Belam, ex BBC, Guardian and Trinity Mirror
http://www.theguardian.com/media/2011/mar/28/live-blogging-transforms-journalism
Benefits for publishers
• Immediacy
• Storytelling
• Community engagement
• Interactivity
• Time saving
Potential Pitfalls (1)
• Doesn’t work for every story
• e.g. those w/o defined timescale/purpose
• Needs a big enough audience/topic to get engagement
• Curating and managing a busy story can be challenging
Pitfalls (2)
"You are more or less providing readers with raw
material rather than telling them a story.
You also tend to get swept up in the rush of events, and
don't have nearly as much time as you'd like to think
about what's happening and make connections, or
write any sort of news analysis."
Robert Mackay, New York Times
http://www.theguardian.com/media/2011/mar/28/live-blogging-transforms-journalism
Pitfalls (3)
“…the name, live blogging, does not helpfully
describe the format and suggests triviality."
Matt Well, Blogs Editor, The Guardian
http://www.theguardian.com/media/2011/mar/28/live-blogging-transforms-journalism
Key things to know and do
Reaction and reflection – opportunities
• Live events – press conferences, announcements, panels
• Sport – play-by-play
• Events – festivals, protests, concerts
• TV – scene-by-scene
• Curation – what the internet is saying on a trending topic
Pre-event prep
Do your homework, just as you would for any assignment!
• Research speakers beforehand (program notes, press release etc.)
• Identify videos, pics etc. to embed at the right time.
• This can include your own interviews with speakers and attendees.
• Make sure your kit is fully charged.
Source: http://melcoulson.com/2012/11/15/graphic-tools-for-live-blogging/
When you start
• Set the scene. Don’t forget the 5 Ws:
Who are you,
What are you covering,
Why are you covering it,
Where are you (are you there, watching from home etc.)
When is this happening?
* You can do much of this before the event starts to tee up readers.
What you do throughout
• Describe what you see, hear, feel.
• Find and add links/context.
• Embed photos, video, tweets, graphics, charts, maps etc.
• Ask questions of your audience, curate comments/feedback.
Remember
“You’re not providing a transcript of a meeting or a log of
every play in a game. You’re reporting. Use news judgment.
Provide description, explanation and analysis.”
Steve Buttry: http://ijnet.org/en/blog/cover-it-live-20-tips-reporting-scene
And… that quality matters
• Spelling
• Attribution
• Accuracy
Even Especially
in a live environment
For an example of when it went wrong see:
http://www.poynter.org/news/mediawire/1
79144/how-journalists-are-covering-todays-
scotus-health-care-ruling/
More widely
• Link to other sources – boosts traffic and SEO.
• Use keywords for SEO and the right #tags.
• Engage with others and make them aware of what you’re doing – online
and/or in person (e.g. photograph people and ask for quotes).
• Embed your pre-prepared material in relevant places.
• Embed material from others.
And don’t forget to use social
• Not just to source, but also share what you’re doing.
• Post and link on Facebook, Twitter et al.
• Use #tags to encourage people to continue the conversation.
• And to help other people to find you.
Ideas in action: 7 Case Studies
Republican Debate: The New York Times
http://www.nytimes.com/live/republican-debate-election-2016-cleveland/
Hajj Stampede: Reuters
http://live.reuters.com/Event/World_News?Page=117
Libya and Middle East unrest: The Guardian
Coverage for Friday 25th March 2011:
http://www.theguardian.com/world/blog/2011/mar/25/libya-middle-east-gaddafi-
yemen-syria-bahrain-nato
Rebel fighters burn
uniforms of
captured Gaddafi
loyalists near
Ajdabiyah Goran
Tomasevic/Reuters
Egypt uprising: Al Jazeera
http://blogs.aljazeera.com/blog/middle-east/live-messages-egypt
To overcome the internet blackout and
restrictions on its journalists, Al Jazeera was
publishing audio messages from its
correspondents in Egypt, powered by live-
blogging platform ScribbleLive.
ScribbleLive's Mark Walker told
Journalism.co.uk that the idea had resulted
in "really compelling content".
https://www.journalism.co.uk/news/al-
jazeera-still-battling-interference-in-egypt-
after-internet-blackout-lifted/s2/a542597/
2010 NFL Draft: ESPN
http://www.coveritlive.com/index2.php/option=com_altcaster/task=vi
ewaltcast/template=/altcast_code=29340e30f8/width=320/height=infi
nite/entryLoc=top/mobileVersion=yes/titlePage=off/linkTo=http%253A
%252F%252Fwww.coveritlive.com/lightboxGallery=no
Sunderland vs. West Ham: BBC Sport
http://www.bbc.com/sport/0/football/34366673
The Pope in NYC
http://pavementpieces.com/the-pope-in-nyc/
Tips
Summary of key points
• Use the event #tag
• Alert your followers
• Share valuable content
• Interact with your followers
• Engage with others commenting in this space
• Share what they are doing and saying
• Use multimedia – don’t just use text!
• Provide a summary to wrap up your coverage
Further pro tips
• Don’t just write / tweet for the sake of it.
• Short regular updates work best.
• Add links, photos, contributions from others.
• Provide recaps for people joining part way through.
• Your live blog can become your notes for a follow up story.
Further Reading
• Thurman, N. & Walters, A. (2013). Live Blogging- Digital Journalism's
Pivotal Platform? A case study of the production, consumption, and
form of Live Blogs at Guardian.co.uk. Digital Journalism, 1(1), pp. 82-
101. doi: 10.1080/21670811.2012.714935 – also at:
http://openaccess.city.ac.uk/1742/1/for-dist-2-academics.pdf
• Tips for conference bloggers: Bruno Giussani www.LunchOverIP.com
Ethan Zuckerman www.EthanZuckerman.com/blog via
http://giussani.typepad.com/loip/conferenceblogging/conferenceblo
gging_zuckerman-giussani_A4_color.pdf
• How The Telegraph liveblog historical anniversaries:
http://onlinejournalismblog.com/2015/10/01/how-the-telegraph-
liveblog-historical-anniversaries/ - see also:
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/history/battle-of-britain/11865303/The-
Battle-of-Britain-as-it-happened-on-September-15-1940-live.html
• Suggestions (but not standards) for live tweeting:
https://stevebuttry.wordpress.com/2011/09/06/suggestions-but-not-
standards-for-live-tweeting/ (be sure to read the comments too)
• How to liveblog a TV debate:
http://onlinejournalismblog.com/2015/04/03/how-to-liveblog-a-tv-
debate/
Assignment
Task
• Produce a Live Report / Blog.
• Must report on it for minimum of one hour.
• Subject – and platform - agreed with me in advance.
• Submit by 23:59 12th October.
Other Tasks
• Review and Edit the I Know What You Did Last Summer
that was written about you.
• Submit by 23:59 12th October.
• Complete the events and contact spreadsheet.
• Submit by 23:59 5th October. THAT’S TONIGHT!
Questions?
Problems?
damianr@uoregon.edu
Or visit me in
201 Allen Hall

Live Blogging

  • 1.
  • 2.
    This week…. Livereporting/blogging
  • 3.
    Definitions Andy Bull: http://www.multimedia-journalism.co.uk/node/1598 “Isee live blogging as more of a curatorial task – one done by a journalist at a desk, tapping in to a wide range of sources for a story. Live reporting denotes to me that a journalist is on the ground, filing text, stills and perhaps audio and video, where possible, from the location of a developing story.”
  • 4.
    Definitions (cont) “Often thetwo come together – and you get one or more reporters out in the field, and one or more editors or curators putting a live blog together from their output, and that of others. These livesifting a wide range of potentially curatable content from official sources bloggers will be, other media outlets, eye-witnesses and those using social media – Twitter, Facebook and the rest – to add their coverage and comment on a story.”
  • 5.
    Ways it canwork • Live tweeting • Live blogging • Curation e.g. using Storify • Periscope
  • 6.
    Multple tools andways to do it • WordPress plugin • Tumblr • Everybit, Storify et al • Snapchat Stories • Live Tweet • Video stream e.g. Periscope • CoverItLive
  • 7.
    Why do it?(1) “It's a form that's charming in its directness; at its best it generally does away with any writerly conceits, and demands the author just get on with telling you what's just happened." Neil McIntosh, the online editor of the Wall Street Journal Europe http://www.theguardian.com/media/2011/mar/28/live-blogging-transforms-journalism
  • 8.
    Why do it?(2) TheStreet’s technology editor Chris Ciaccia said he enjoys live blogging for two primary reasons. First, live blogs allow him to get commentary and analysis out in real time without having to go through editors or updating a time stamp. And second, he believes live blogs are an easier format to read once the event has ended, particularly for readers who only want a snippet of the day’s news. http://talkingbiznews.com/2/why-tech-journalists-love-live-blogging/
  • 9.
    Why do it?(3) "It feels like a type of news reporting that is emerging as being native to the web. Most video news on the internet is essentially the same kind of package that you'd produce for TV, most audio the same as you'd produce for radio, and most text-based news could be printed out. The emerging live blog style isn't any of those things." Martin Belam, ex BBC, Guardian and Trinity Mirror http://www.theguardian.com/media/2011/mar/28/live-blogging-transforms-journalism
  • 10.
    Benefits for publishers •Immediacy • Storytelling • Community engagement • Interactivity • Time saving
  • 11.
    Potential Pitfalls (1) •Doesn’t work for every story • e.g. those w/o defined timescale/purpose • Needs a big enough audience/topic to get engagement • Curating and managing a busy story can be challenging
  • 12.
    Pitfalls (2) "You aremore or less providing readers with raw material rather than telling them a story. You also tend to get swept up in the rush of events, and don't have nearly as much time as you'd like to think about what's happening and make connections, or write any sort of news analysis." Robert Mackay, New York Times http://www.theguardian.com/media/2011/mar/28/live-blogging-transforms-journalism
  • 13.
    Pitfalls (3) “…the name,live blogging, does not helpfully describe the format and suggests triviality." Matt Well, Blogs Editor, The Guardian http://www.theguardian.com/media/2011/mar/28/live-blogging-transforms-journalism
  • 14.
    Key things toknow and do
  • 15.
    Reaction and reflection– opportunities • Live events – press conferences, announcements, panels • Sport – play-by-play • Events – festivals, protests, concerts • TV – scene-by-scene • Curation – what the internet is saying on a trending topic
  • 16.
    Pre-event prep Do yourhomework, just as you would for any assignment! • Research speakers beforehand (program notes, press release etc.) • Identify videos, pics etc. to embed at the right time. • This can include your own interviews with speakers and attendees. • Make sure your kit is fully charged.
  • 17.
  • 18.
    When you start •Set the scene. Don’t forget the 5 Ws: Who are you, What are you covering, Why are you covering it, Where are you (are you there, watching from home etc.) When is this happening? * You can do much of this before the event starts to tee up readers.
  • 19.
    What you dothroughout • Describe what you see, hear, feel. • Find and add links/context. • Embed photos, video, tweets, graphics, charts, maps etc. • Ask questions of your audience, curate comments/feedback.
  • 20.
    Remember “You’re not providinga transcript of a meeting or a log of every play in a game. You’re reporting. Use news judgment. Provide description, explanation and analysis.” Steve Buttry: http://ijnet.org/en/blog/cover-it-live-20-tips-reporting-scene
  • 21.
    And… that qualitymatters • Spelling • Attribution • Accuracy Even Especially in a live environment For an example of when it went wrong see: http://www.poynter.org/news/mediawire/1 79144/how-journalists-are-covering-todays- scotus-health-care-ruling/
  • 22.
    More widely • Linkto other sources – boosts traffic and SEO. • Use keywords for SEO and the right #tags. • Engage with others and make them aware of what you’re doing – online and/or in person (e.g. photograph people and ask for quotes). • Embed your pre-prepared material in relevant places. • Embed material from others.
  • 23.
    And don’t forgetto use social • Not just to source, but also share what you’re doing. • Post and link on Facebook, Twitter et al. • Use #tags to encourage people to continue the conversation. • And to help other people to find you.
  • 24.
    Ideas in action:7 Case Studies
  • 25.
    Republican Debate: TheNew York Times http://www.nytimes.com/live/republican-debate-election-2016-cleveland/
  • 26.
  • 27.
    Libya and MiddleEast unrest: The Guardian Coverage for Friday 25th March 2011: http://www.theguardian.com/world/blog/2011/mar/25/libya-middle-east-gaddafi- yemen-syria-bahrain-nato Rebel fighters burn uniforms of captured Gaddafi loyalists near Ajdabiyah Goran Tomasevic/Reuters
  • 28.
    Egypt uprising: AlJazeera http://blogs.aljazeera.com/blog/middle-east/live-messages-egypt To overcome the internet blackout and restrictions on its journalists, Al Jazeera was publishing audio messages from its correspondents in Egypt, powered by live- blogging platform ScribbleLive. ScribbleLive's Mark Walker told Journalism.co.uk that the idea had resulted in "really compelling content". https://www.journalism.co.uk/news/al- jazeera-still-battling-interference-in-egypt- after-internet-blackout-lifted/s2/a542597/
  • 29.
    2010 NFL Draft:ESPN http://www.coveritlive.com/index2.php/option=com_altcaster/task=vi ewaltcast/template=/altcast_code=29340e30f8/width=320/height=infi nite/entryLoc=top/mobileVersion=yes/titlePage=off/linkTo=http%253A %252F%252Fwww.coveritlive.com/lightboxGallery=no
  • 30.
    Sunderland vs. WestHam: BBC Sport http://www.bbc.com/sport/0/football/34366673
  • 31.
    The Pope inNYC http://pavementpieces.com/the-pope-in-nyc/
  • 32.
  • 33.
    Summary of keypoints • Use the event #tag • Alert your followers • Share valuable content • Interact with your followers • Engage with others commenting in this space • Share what they are doing and saying • Use multimedia – don’t just use text! • Provide a summary to wrap up your coverage
  • 34.
    Further pro tips •Don’t just write / tweet for the sake of it. • Short regular updates work best. • Add links, photos, contributions from others. • Provide recaps for people joining part way through. • Your live blog can become your notes for a follow up story.
  • 35.
    Further Reading • Thurman,N. & Walters, A. (2013). Live Blogging- Digital Journalism's Pivotal Platform? A case study of the production, consumption, and form of Live Blogs at Guardian.co.uk. Digital Journalism, 1(1), pp. 82- 101. doi: 10.1080/21670811.2012.714935 – also at: http://openaccess.city.ac.uk/1742/1/for-dist-2-academics.pdf • Tips for conference bloggers: Bruno Giussani www.LunchOverIP.com Ethan Zuckerman www.EthanZuckerman.com/blog via http://giussani.typepad.com/loip/conferenceblogging/conferenceblo gging_zuckerman-giussani_A4_color.pdf
  • 36.
    • How TheTelegraph liveblog historical anniversaries: http://onlinejournalismblog.com/2015/10/01/how-the-telegraph- liveblog-historical-anniversaries/ - see also: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/history/battle-of-britain/11865303/The- Battle-of-Britain-as-it-happened-on-September-15-1940-live.html • Suggestions (but not standards) for live tweeting: https://stevebuttry.wordpress.com/2011/09/06/suggestions-but-not- standards-for-live-tweeting/ (be sure to read the comments too) • How to liveblog a TV debate: http://onlinejournalismblog.com/2015/04/03/how-to-liveblog-a-tv- debate/
  • 37.
  • 38.
    Task • Produce aLive Report / Blog. • Must report on it for minimum of one hour. • Subject – and platform - agreed with me in advance. • Submit by 23:59 12th October.
  • 39.
    Other Tasks • Reviewand Edit the I Know What You Did Last Summer that was written about you. • Submit by 23:59 12th October. • Complete the events and contact spreadsheet. • Submit by 23:59 5th October. THAT’S TONIGHT!
  • 40.