Online Journalism News
'Will radio kill the local newspaper star?'
James Cridland (left) is head of Future Media & Technology for BBC Audio & Music Interactive. He blogs at James.Cridland.net and runs MediaUK.
I've always
worked in digital media. After all - my first job was carrying the
radio station mobile phone. Back in 1989, mobile phones were the size
of a small suitcase and the weight of a car battery. This mobile phone
needed a skinny, slightly nervous man fresh out of school to carry for
the slightly diminutive news journalist, who was grateful for the help.
We went out to cover a house fire in Bradford - light damage, but smelly. Nobody
died, but the station still sent out a reporter to file a piece from
the incident and then to interview a fireman on a Uher tape machine.
This piece of audio was driven back to the station in the little pool car, edited on tape
using something quite like sticky-tape and some chinagraph pens,
transferred to an eight-track cartridge and played out on the next
hour's rather stiffly-presented five-minute news bulletin.
Local
commercial radio is certainly not staffed to such an extent: Pennine
Radio, where I worked, had at least eight journalists quietly tapping
away on typewriters on little thin bits of A5 thin paper.
But local
radio still does a great job of local news. It's the main
differentiator between national and local radio and consistently one
of the main reasons why people continue to tune in.
The web now
means that local radio can always have a local news presence: local
news, 24 hours a day instead of the first three minutes of
every hour. So last month for Journalism.co.uk I had a quick random search through what local radio is doing online in terms of news. Are the stations doing a decent job?
The first station I chose at
random was
U105 - the
Belfast station which, as part of the same company that owns UTV, the
ITV franchise in Northern Ireland, should have a decent shout at local
news. But they lazily do nothing, linking to UTV's website instead. I
was surprised at this: U105 wants to drive audiences away from its own
website. I'd lay a bet that not all UTV's audience listen to U105, nor
all U105's audience watch UTV. A missed opportunity - particularly
since I'll bet you it's in a database on the same webserver.
A quick trip east to one of my old stomping grounds,
Bauer's Viking FM
in Hull, which has a
local news
section that at first looks impressive. The top story at the time was
about the new photographic cigarette packet warnings, an admittedly
entirely non-local story. But it's a good way of making radio more
visual by directing your audience to see the new warnings that 'will
appear on cigarette packets from today' - which would have been quite
timely had the 'today' in question not passed six days ago.
Similarly a second story related to a
woman who 'goes on trial today', but the trial's over, and has been since
mid-August. The third story is about A-level results 'released today', which, if they're releasing A-level results in
October, is certainly a story (except, naturally, they aren't). Oh dear.
Finally, I tried
Global's Essex FM. You'd hope that the country's largest
commercial radio group would get it right - and it
has: the news is up-to-date, albeit undated; the writing's
variable (some simply copy/pasted from the audio cues, some rewritten
for the web), but at least it's there and updated.
Essex FM, like
Viking, also has national news, travel and weather - indeed, the only
slightly curious thing is the positioning of the local news below the
national stuff. Nicely done.
Doing local news online could be as
simple as making the latest audio bulletin available on-demand; or
linking to products like Google News to give your local listeners the
very best local news about the stories you're covering from all the
local news sources available.
Slapping radio copy online looks weak and
thin, but augmenting that with other information from the rest of the
internet could still work.
And of course you'd expect the BBC's
local websites to do this job well and, by and large, they do - even
though it's a rather messy, inconsistent experience currently as the
BBC's sites make the transition to their new designs.
Still my random surfing tells me that local newspaper websites have little to worry
about from some of their commercial radio colleagues. I wonder what my
mobile-phone-challenged colleague would have thought of that nearly
twenty years ago?
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james cridland
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