Showing posts with label Marcel Theroux. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Marcel Theroux. Show all posts

Monday, May 26, 2008

The Video Journalism Revolution UK - Watch this


Birth of a station - Video Journalism revolution from david dunkley gyimah on Vimeo.
90 second clip shows Michael Rosenblum in song mode, with Vjs Tricica Adudu and Marcel Theroux commenting on their experience, rounded off with one of the station's news editors Peter Brookes whom would go on to become managing director of Manchester United TV.
If you're interested in video journalism, as a newspaper, broadcaster or citizen journalist, you will absolutely, most definitely want to watch this, the video journalism revolution in the UK.

The title was Birth of a Station, a play off from DW Griffiths Birth of a Nation 1915.

It is the documentary about video journalism's entry into the UK in 1994.

How thirty video journalists came together and what they made of their new skills, the training and views of Michael Rosenblum, and how a station costing 50 million UK pounds was born.

I was thrilled to bits when I stumbled across this in my archive, even if the quality leaves a lot to be desired.

It features, among others interviews with the late Sir David English - the newspaper editor's editor, managing director Nick Pollard and the CEO Julian Aston.

The doc has academic as well as real industry value.

It is a snapshot of a piece of broadcasting history emerging from a blank canvas.

Video journalism had never been practised in the UK. In fact no one knew what it was.

But after the launch, 100s of broadcasters from around the world visited the station to see how it all worked.


The VJ family
"You join a group of about 100 vjs around the world...., an elite bunch", Michael says on tape back then.

Well 14 years on, so much has radically changed, but so much also remains the same.

The anxieties, the fears - how will television crews react to us, the excitement it's all here.

Many, many of the faces you'll see have become household names, award winning documentary and acclaimed TV makers and a notable MBE.

Among them Marcel Theroux, brother of Louis Theroux and son of American travel writer and novelist, Paul Theroux; Dimitri Doganis, an amazing film maker and winner of several awards for films such as 'The Tea Boy of Gaza'; and Rachel Ellison MBE, behind the BBC's Afghan Woman's Hour, which promoted human rights.

Those are a just a few.

Channel One was able to recruit 30 trainees from 3000 applications, so it could do what many newspapers can't - pick their VJs.

This isn't on the film, but some of the filtering techniques included observing how you handled a camera placed in front of you.


Video Journalism vs TV - not a them and us
This doc gives a real sense that wherever you are with your video journalism ambitions, you will prevail, if you persevere.

Whatever the debate about rights and wrongs of video journalism making, a new generational crop of talent will emerge pushing film making much, much further than anyone could imagine.

The future of video journalism, is almost a throw back to the ghost of Channel One, 1994, when it won't be about news any longer, but a whole production cycle.

Channel One had a film review with Karen Krizanovich, an interactive show about the Net and was the first to broadcast down cable in which viewers could respond via the net.

Remember this is 1994.

It had a car programme testing the most recent releases, a cookery show, a travel show and the rest - all made by one, sometimes two person video journalist teams.

The truly most interesting aspect of video journalism will be regional and national newspapers commissioning and making programmes:
mysanantonio.com
, mercurynews.com, thisiscornwall.co.uk The Hull Daily Mail, and so on.

It's already happening with some outfits e.g. The Telegraph and the BBC's plans for local broadband news looks like a contemporary version of Channel One, sans cable distribution, which is what ultimately led to the station's demise.

Birth of a station coming soon.

Blog author David Dunkley Gyimah, was one of the thirty video journalists at Channel One. Today, he still practises video journalism and is now a senior university lecturer and Phd student, where he lectures on integrated multimedia video journalism (CSS site building, multimedia and advance video journalism) and advises a number of newspapers such as the Financial Times.

Video journalism's anti-aesthetism short from david dunkley gyimah on Vimeo.
You can contact him at david@viewmagazine.tv facebook or skype: daviddunkleygyimah

Sunday, February 17, 2008

The British VideoJournalism Revolution from 1994 to now



What defined videojournalism? How different was it to Television? Why was the first practitioner in the UK a newspaper outfit? And where next can it go as the main debate focuses on primary implementation?

In a series of talks and webinars I'll be producing facts and films from archives, never seen before, that might give you a better understanding of what we're doing now and how that conversation developed 14 years ago



The British VideoJournallism Revolution
No company, or era captured the essence of this brave new form of journalism called Videojournalism in the UK than Channel One TV.

For its first birthday, the accolades as you can see ( Click Image) were a fulsome acknowledgement of the changes enveloping the media; the seeds of change had been sown.

What its first 25 videojournalists knew back then, supported by innovative management and technicians, will not surprise many of them today.

After the first year some of Britain's biggest names in the media and politics paid their respect.

  • Tony Blair MP, not quite Prime Minister said:
    "Congratulations to Channel One on its first year. It has already been a regular fixture of all important news events and I have enjoyed speaking to its journalists. I wish it every success in the future"

  • Jane Root - at Wall to Wall who would be the first ever woman to become a channel controller at the BBC said:
    "Congratulations to Channel One. We've been delighted to help Channel One prove that good television can be low cost and high quality as well. Channel One deserves to be a great success.

  • Chris Crammer who was head of News gathering BBC News and Current Affairs and would go onto CNN, he said:
    " Congratulations to Channel One. Video Journalism has really made its mark. You've broken new ground in multi-skilling and competitive coverage. The Industry should take note"

    And then Stuart Purvis, who was chief executive of ITN, the UK's biggest independent news provider said:
    "Congratulations on a year of Channel One. You've already developed lots of new young talent and taken some impressive steps in multi-skilling".

    It wasn't only that Channel One was radically changing the face of News and Programme production, but had implemented a next generation management tier with innovation at its core, and a revolutionary news output system that had hundreds of programme execs visiting the station to learn how it was done.

    "We used track and rushes, so sometimes wouldn't see the inside of the news station for a week".

    The programme went out live, but it wasn't live, unless so various times when it created a tear in the schedule for its juke box play out system that looked like the Enterprise. One person could control everything.

    Many of those innovative assets have been lost or not yet resurfaced.

    800 people across the UK applied to become Videojournalists. It created a wild amount of curiosity.

    What is videojournalism? How does it work? What sort of stories will we cover? How will we compete with the likes of the BBC? How hyperlocal can we get? How will we cover nigh beats as soloj journalists? How will the internet aid our quest? How much will videojournalists earn? What is their future? And how would they like to shape the future?

    Remember this was 1994, 14 years ago.

    Some of the VJs would later become household names in the media at large, and multiple industry winners as well.

    Marcel Theroux, son of the famous Paul Theroux and brother to Louis Theroux, sat opposite me has made several ground breaking docs. Dimitri Doganis has become one of the UK's most formidable doc makers winning awards for features such as the Siege of Bethlehem for BBC TV. Julia Ceaser, an entertainment correspondent now fronts BBC News 24s Economics programme and Rachel Ellison, now an MBE went on to tutor female journalists in Tajikistan adn was Editor of the BBC's World Trust.

    We all met in one place, with high ideals. What we knew back then has been rerun in a new paradigm now.

    In posts to come I'll share some more of the history of Channel Oners and the flame it lit that is now subsuming news. And how full circle 14 years on a new phase of videojournalism has opened for me, which involves looking at Future TV, Presence TV and IM6 Videojournalism, which I was invited to speak at the BBC's Leadership forum.

    Next stop - how to fold videojournalism on itself and eschew VJ made for Television's stanza