This week we see how one local TV station put live footage from drones into a news broadcast, and we learn how a data team used sensors to find the hottest subway stations in New York City.
PART 1: Drones at ABC7
KGO-TV/ABC7 in San Francisco is one of the first local news operations in the United States to put footage from a remote-controlled aerial drone live onto the air. We find out how they did it from Ken Miguel, special projects producer at KGO, and Ron Futrell, sales and marketing director at ArrowData, which supplied the technology.
Reporting by Berkeley Lovelace.
[To skip directly to this segment in YouTube, click here.]
Additional information:
Video footage and additional photos are included in this recap from ABC7’s initial drone coverage. The story gave viewers an overhead look at a stadium being demolished.
Las Vegas-based ArrowData was the first to receive an exemption from the Federal Aviation Administration to fly drones commercially for news gathering, or what the company calls “aerojournalism.” In addition to equipment, the company also offers training and other resources. More details are available from the company’s website.
ArrowData recently signed a deal with TVU Networks to handle delivery of drone footage via TVU’s live mobile cellular uplink transmitters.
As Sales and Marketing Director Ron Futrell tells the Las Vegas Business Press, future pilots would get training at ArrowData’s headquarters “so that they can do it safely, properly and understand the ethics involved so that they can go out and fly professionally for their news outlet.” The article also includes more information about how a consultancy deal with a news operation might work.
Related story:
To learn more about what goes into flying an unmanned aircraft (i.e., a drone), check out this piece by RJI’s Rick Shaw in which he recounts what he learned while getting trained over the summer at The Unmanned Safety Institute in Orlando, Florida.
PART 2: Sensors in the subway
In its latest journalistic experiment with sensors, New York Public Radio’s WNYC data team gathered temperatures at subway stations across the city to help commuters identify — and possibly avoid — the hottest spots. As Senior Editor for Data News John Keefe tells us, the project was easier and cheaper than you might think.
Reporting by Berkeley Lovelace.
[To skip directly to this segment in YouTube, click here.]
Additional information:
The thermometers used by the WNYC data team to record temperatures are Etekcity non-contact digital IR infrared thermometer, available directly from the manufacturer and also from Amazon.com for about $10 each.
Reuben Stern is the deputy director of the Futures Lab at the Reynolds Journalism Institute and host and co-producer of the weekly Futures Lab video update.