Tag Archives: video

A Media Trainer says please don’t call me that.

All mustache no substance.

I’m really starting to hate the term “media training”.  I feel like such a cheeseball when I tell people that’s part of what I do.  It makes me think of Ron Burgundy, Will Farrell’s corny anchorman who is all mustache and no substance. So I’m working on a redefinition….

Traditionally a “media trainer” coaches someone to talk to a reporter and give a decent interview while looking composed.  But seriously, how many companies, non-profits, or professionals are dealing with the traditional press on a daily basis?  And should that even be their priority? Local or national media coverage can give you a boost but creating your own media constantly is key- from tweeting, to having a facebook page, to making videos for your website.  And coming across composed (snooze…..) isn’t necessarily the way to go.

Here’s where my “new media training” (“Cool Media Creation”? “On-Camera Upgrading”?) comes in…let’s say you are a researcher at a non-profit and suddenly you are being asked to be in a video about your fact finding missions.  Uh, that sounds time consuming and anxiety producing, you think.  Not if we sit down and sketch out 2 reasonable ’30 second stand-ups (you speaking to camera) that succinctly explain who you are and what your doing (“Hi, I’m Jane Non-Profit it and I’m in Kampala talking to Ugandans who have been granted money by our organization.  In this video you’ll see how your donations are actually building local businesses.” Video montage follows.)   We practice, pick out a shirt. It takes Jane an extra 30 minutes on her trip to film it.  And BOOM- she’s making a connection with people who believe in the cause, possibly raising more money, and giving everyone a glimpse into her work, in addition to her written report.

Some people LOVE being on-camera and are good at it.  Most people kind of stink or just don’t take simple steps (like looking the right way, or adjusting their webcam, or organizing their ideas) that would help them make a better impression, bigger impact, etc, all those true cliches.

We are starting to conduct all our business by video, whether it’s informal like skype or internal like a company webchat or for the outside eye, like how-to’s on  your company’s website.  If you have a better term for “media training”, PLEASE leave me a suggestion.

When Tech Resurfaces…the NYT and Microsoft’s “Surface” Computer

I was relieved to see that something interesting & educational, not just commercial (I was picturing hotel lobbies), is happening with Microsoft’s Surface computer technology.  I did a piece on it for Reuters over 4 years ago (see below).  Now, according to the Nieman Journalism Lab, the New York Times is working on  ”a Times’ screen-top version of a kitchen table. It’s based on Microsoft’s Surface technology, modified by the Research & Design Lab to create a Times-oriented user experience that reimagines the old ‘around the breakfast table’ reading of the paper.”

Cool.  Watch the original video from 4 years ago and then watch the new demo for an interesting contrast and comparison.

Just 1 Minute of News

The website OneMinuteNews.com launched last week. It offers, obviously, a one minute video wrap up of news (mostly AP footage, as far as I can tell) and claims: “You might notice news is different here. We give it to you straight up.”

They don’t seem to have quite got their footing yet but the idea of a minute of video news has been tested.  Successes, for example, include the BBC’s One-Minute of World News and its “60 Seconds” on BBC3.

Obviously, as an ex-BBC reporter/producer I’m partial to my roots but here’s the thing: to get people to believe everything they see in 1 minute, I think you need to have established cred.   I’m curious to see if OneMinuteNews will be able to establish itself as anything than just another news aggregator that recuts wire service video. Am I soooo Generation X?  Here’s Fast Company’s take on the new venture.  Short and interesting read if you are a news nerd.


Questioning the Open Road

Looking out at the future of publishing from the podium of the eBook Summit.

Happy 2010- may it be busy and lucrative for all of us.  So let’s talk new ventures…

I hosted mediabistro’s eBook Summit a few weeks ago and was intrigued by the presentation made by Open Road, a supposedly new kind of publishing company.

Founded by former HarperCollins head honcho Jane Friedman and Oscar-winning film producer Jeffrey Sharp, Open Road claims to be a new kind of publishing company that will brand authors and multimedia market them.  That means, Friedman and Sharp said, a lot of video content too, not just the written word.

Their purpose, they say, is to change the relationship of the author & consumer.  For example, they are aggregating all the material out there about William Styron (ie. working with Duke to digitize his papers, posting old audio clips, creating “premium” content like a documentary with the help of his daughters, etc.), all to bring Styron’s work to a new audience.

But can they seriously make money?  How many eyeballs can a well-crafted (and expensive) doc that is posted online really attract?   There’s already been a fair amount of controversy over the company, before it even really gets content out there.  Read this NYT op-ed and this article about the possible legal nastiness in publishing.

P.S. at eBook I also interviewed my old friend, the BBC’s Katty Kay (see the picture above)…she mentioned a crazy stat: her husband’s book was launched in the UK on Oct. 1- one of 800(!) titles that were released that same day. Yikes. Between the pay, the market, and the competition, getting a book out just doesn’t hold the same cache for journalists that it used to.

One Year Since Financial Mayhem Struck

Monday officially marks the first anniversary since Lehman Brothers failed and the world’s financial system threatened to collapse.   Doesn’t it feel like more than a year?  To bring back the memories of the chaos, watch this piece I did recapping those crazy months of 2008.

more about “One year since Lehman demise – Reuters“, posted with vodpod

A Client’s Perspective

Andreas likes teleprompter

Andreas likes teleprompter

Last week I taught a 1-day intensive on-camera workshop at mediabistro.  (Click here for a course description and my welcome video).
This morning I got the most lovely e-mail from one of my clients, Andreas Fuchs.  He’s a cinema exhibition consultant and analyst who is starting to do video for an online magazine.  Andreas also wants to include a welcome video on his website (so many uses for video online!).
As an instructor, it’s incredibly useful to have someone outline exactly what they took away from the class.
Here are Andreas’ Top 6  Takeway Points:

1) The introductions of fellow attendees set the tone and provided an excellent overview about the many different ways to use video. (It helped that we had such a diverse and interesting group of people who would have made how to use a pencil fascinating.)

2) The “Tips for Compelling Video” emailed prior to class were great. (Coming a tad earlier would’ve been even better.)

3) Your coaching during the taping process: Calm, cool and collectedly, with a smile and honesty.

Encouraging me to act as if I was in front of a group of people (which I feel more comfortable with).

4) Editing the speech with an outsider’s perspective, yet respectful of what I was trying to say.

I do not recall if you actually encouraged this. I found it crucial to go over the text again after you were done and making sure it still worked for me. It turned out after the edit something flowed better in a different place than originally.

5) Changing “everything there is to know about movie theatres..” to “all there is…,” turning a statement that could’ve potentially come across as arrogant into a matter-of-fact. Just brilliant!

6) Teleprompter is the way to go.

There were many more, but those are my tops.

In fact, I am so inspired that I want to conduct my first video interview this week, on-site at a theatre opening. It’ll be with the little webcam on my netbook and I still have to convince the subjects… but, thanks to you and the class, I will definitely have a go at it.

Thank you and kind regards, Andreas.

I must point out that I don’t agree with 6) “Telemprompter is the way to go”.  I try to encourage my clients to learn how to prepare well so they don’t need teleprompter and can feel comfortable in any situation (including live).  Regardless, I’m beaming.  Thanks, Andreas!

Check out my previous posts for more media tips and my top 5 especially for guys.

Who Owns Me Anyway?

garyveeMediabistro.com (whom I adore and for whom I host conferences and teach) has had some quality events recently.  It has a policy, though, of asking guest speakers to sign a release, which says mb basically owns their appearance.  (see speaker Heather Gold‘s comment in my post below regarding her online video panel).

GaryVee, natch, got away with having his own camera at the Career Circus event a couple weeks back.  If you just don’t get social media, really, his keynote speech is worth watching.  I guess his content really does want to be free.  Even if you DO get social media, watch it anyway to fire up your blogging synapses.

Mediaite’s Panel Nerds

Danny & Etan. Or is it Etan & Danny?

Danny & Etan. Or is it Etan & Danny?

It’s not often that dorky media panels get rated but now with Mediaite’s Panel Nerds, we media dorks WILL BE JUDGED (harshly but fairly, I’m sure).

And I’m so pleased to say that mediabistro’s online entertainment content panel the other night got a big thumbs up!  Read the full review here.  Etan and Danny subbed the panel down nicely.  And I’m particularly happy with their asessment of me.  Guys, you make it all worthwhile.

“Manoush Zomorodi did a great job of two things. The first is handling a panel this large. She began by dividing them in two groups, but that boundary quickly disintegrated. The second is offering quick background and explanations for people, sites or programs mentioned. In fact, she set the tone for the panelists to begin explaining things themselves. She was a real audience advocate.”

From On-Air Reporter to Online Video Powerhouse: Dina Kaplan

dina-kaplan---credit-joi

Dina Kaplan is the COO of blip.tv, the online video distribution site.  There’s a great profile of her in this week’s Observer.  She went from local tv reporter to COO of a company that hosts and distrubtes 48,000 original web shows.

In the article she describes her ah-ha moment, when she finally decided to jump ship:

“Later that September, an interview she had with Andrew Heyward, then the CBS News chief, made up her mind.

“We had a pretty formal interview,” Ms. Kaplan recalled. “At the very end he said, ‘What else do you do? What are you interested in?’ And I said, you know, ‘On Wednesday nights, I get together with some really smart friends of mine and we are starting a company, which is a platform for people creating Web shows on the Internet.’ And—I will never forget this—he pulled his chair back and looked at me in a whole new light. That sort of glaze of interviewing yet another reporter, only the seventy-five thousandth of his life, ended and he snapped out of it. He looked at me directly as a person rather than another local TV reporter, and he said, ‘Do that. That is the future. Forget this TV reporting thing.’”

Dina goes on to explain how she secured venture capital and turned herself into an online video powerhouse.   She spoke on Wednesday night at mediabistro’s panel on Producing Online Video Content (I hosted it- see the top tips gleened from the event here).  She brought a male co-worker with here- and in the article, she explains why she feels the need to travel with a male escort.  It’s pretty depressing- otherwise people don’t take her seriously.

Anyway, the story will inspire TV reporters wondering what their next move should be and get budding online video content producers to start shooting.   Tell Dina what you think at the blip blog.

Online Video Content & a Vampire Mom

An example of niche video production.

An example of niche video production.

I hosted a truly fascinating (if I do say so myself) panel discussion last night on producing content, specifically entertainment video, for the web.  Mediabistro, of course (props to Kirsten), put together the awesome lineup: Adam Eland of Bright Red Pixels, Heather Gold, Colin Moore of IFC.com, Diane de Cordova of NextNewNetworks, Paul Kontonis of For Your Imagination, & Dina Kaplan of Blip.tv.

Their top 6 tips for creating & distributing your video online?

1. Speak to the brand that you are producing for.  In other words, if it’s something for IFC, for example, make sure you are staying true to the IFC brand and being authentic.  (this was from Colin Moore, the one proponent of scripted content rather than nonfiction)

2. Maintain intimacy with your audience. (Adam Elend)  That’s what viewing on your computer/phone is all about, right?  Adam works closely with CBS.com….interesting to hear what the big networks are thinking about all this.

3. What works on the web is fun & real. (from the very fun and real Heather Gold who was determined to prove during the discussion that making what you love will triumph over making what you think will sell)

4. It’s just gotta be good. (Paul Kontonis- he says a video is deemed a success  if 50% of the audience make it through 75% of the video. yikes)

5. Keep it fresh, like sushi. (Diane de Kordova- in other words, originality is KEY)

6. Develop the brand, ie, keep the packaging/color scheme/graphics etc. consistent. (Dina Kaplan- and she should know!  She says Blip is sending checks from $25 to tens of thousands of dollars to their content providers…48k shows on Blip right now.)

As for the Vampire Mom, Dina also says that if you’re thinking of producing a show, think which “vertical” your product will fit in…moms? political junkies? gamers? Bikers?  The more specific your niche, sometimes the better.  We decided moms and vampires are big right now so we should do a show on vampire moms.  Then I started thinking- I’m a mother and work in the media….so I guess I actually am a vampire mom.  Although I sometimes feel it’s my child sucking the life out of me…vampire toddler.