This week’s episode focuses on the role of live coverage in the media ecosystem. When does it work? When does it not? How do you balance speed and accuracy? How does it pull in readers? We’ll talk to some of the leading minds in breaking news journalism and how their live coverage has meant big bucks. First up, Texas Tribune’s Rodney Gibbs talks about live coverage of Wendy Davis’s state senate filibuster. Then, we’ll talk to Vox Media CEO Jim Bankoff about the popularity of live-blogging on Vox sites. MediaShift’s Mark Glaser hosts, along with Ana Marie Cox from the Guardian, Mónica Guzmán from the Seattle Times and GeekWire, and Andrew Lih from American University.
Note: The podcast will be off on July 5 for the holiday weekend. We’ll be back in action on July 12 with Facebook’s Vadim Lavrusik as our special guest!
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Mediatwits Bios
Ana Marie Cox is a senior political columnist for The Guardian. She is the founding editor of the Wonkette blog and has covered politics and the culture of Washington, D.C. for outlets including the Washington Post, Playboy, GQ, Mother Jones and Elle. She is the author of the novel “Dog Days” and lives in St. Paul, Minn. Follow her on Twitter @anamariecox.
Mark Glaser is executive editor of MediaShift and Idea Lab. He is a longtime freelance writer and editor, who has contributed to magazines such as Entertainment Weekly, Wired and Conde Nast Traveler, and websites such as CNET and the Yale Global Forum. He lives in San Francisco with his wife Renee and son Julian. You can follow him on Twitter @mediatwit.
Mónica Guzmán is a columnist for the Seattle Times and Northwest tech news site GeekWire and a community strategist for startups and media. She emcees Ignite Seattle, a grab-bag community-fueled speaker series. Mónica was a reporter at the Seattle Post-Intelligencer and seattlepi.com, its online-only successor, where she ran the experimental and award-winning Big Blog and drew a community of readers with online conversation and weekly meetups. Follow her on Twitter @moniguzman.
Andrew Lih is a new media journalist and associate professor of journalism at the American University School of Communication. He is the author of “The Wikipedia Revolution” (Hyperion 2009, Aurum UK 2009) and is a noted expert on online collaboration and journalism. He is a veteran of AT&T Bell Laboratories and in 1994 created the first online city guide for New York City (www.ny.com). Follow him on Twitter @fuzheado and buy his book here.
Special Guests
Podcast topics
1. Live politics: Texas Tribune, Twitter cover Texas Senate filibuster, SCOTUS while cable nets nap
Texas State Senator Wendy Davis held a 12-hour talking filibuster June 25 in hopes of blocking a bill that would ban abortion after 20 weeks of pregnancy and close many clinics that offer abortion services in the state. The Texas Tribune, a nonprofit media organization based in Austin, offered constant live-streaming coverage up to and including the post-session debacle as to whether or not there was a final vote on the legislation. With a live-stream, live-blog and analysis, the Tribune woke up the next morning to heaps of praise. Twitter users also served to stop debate when rules weren’t followed, and the hashtag #StandWithWendy galvanized support for the filibuster. The same could not be said for CNN, which ignored the filibuster and instead aired a segment on blueberry muffins during the most momentous parts of the filibuster. Fox and MSNBC were also mocked, and certain parts of the debate were muted to TV audiences. (CNN and Fox also delayed coverage of the Supreme Court’s ruling on the Defense of Marriage Act June 25.)
This was a home field story for the Texas Tribune, but did you expect such wide international exposure? What are the challenges with live-event coverage online? Filter the good, bad and incorrect?
With special guest, Rodney Gibbs, chief innovation officer of the Texas Tribune
2. Vox Media capitalizes on live tech announcements at E3, WWDC
Silicon Valley is often abuzz during the latest technology unveils, whether they be from Apple, Google, Facebook or Twitter. Live-streams, live-blogs, hashtags and briefs triumph in events heavily publicized and prophesied in media days before each announcement. One up-and-coming player in this realm is Vox Media, which recently saw a boom in traffic during the gaming E3 conference and the Worldwide Developers Conference for Apple: 3.2 million uniques in two days, and more than 500,000 video streams. We’ll talk to Vox Media CEO Jim Bankoff about the custom tech tools and studios they’ve built to take advantage of live event coverage.
How do publishers make money on those big traffic bumps? Is the traffic here today, gone tomorrow? How do you justify the investment?
With special guest, Jim Bankoff, CEO of Vox Media
Other headlines
Facebook to launch news reader like Flipboard? (WSJ)
Silicon Valley changing the world (Foreign Policy)
Poll
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Zach C. Cohen is an editorial and podcasting intern for PBS MediaShift. He is also the editor-in-chief of The Eagle, American University‘s student newspaper, and a reporter for Latin Pulse, a weekly radio program on Latin American foreign affairs based at AU’s School of Communication. Get regular updates from @Zachary_Cohen on Twitter or on his blog.