asia
Dear Singaporeansā¦
ā¦itās hard to experiment with time-lapses when you donāt switch your lights on.
Journalism of the moving pictures form.
asia
ā¦itās hard to experiment with time-lapses when you donāt switch your lights on.
ethics
What happens when you have a video go seriously viral [http://www.bbc.com/news/blogs-trending-37222375]? > A media frenzy ensued and ultimately Kimās video was seen by tens of millions of people around the world. A slew of news organisations sought Kimās permission to use the footage,
Buzzfeed
Buzzfeed is restructuring by splitting into entertainment and news divisions. CEO Jonah Peretti makes an interesting point: > Having a single āvideo departmentā in 2016 makes about as much sense as having a āmobile department.ā Instead of organizing around a format or technology, we will organize our work to take
If youāre into mobile journalism ā and you probably should be ā this kickstarter is worth backing: To be clear, itās already at three times over its target ā and will probably hit four times before its done. But its a chance to get your hands on useful device pretty early.
drone journalism
Footage from the best of the [NYC Drone Film Festival](http://www.nycdronefilmfestival.com).Remarkable stuff. It feels like weāre only scratching the surface of what drone journalism can do.
aggregation
How journalists behave when your video goes viral [http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/collegeofjournalism/entries/c9b6250d-6557-4968-b0ce-e6eef3e04dfb] Journalist Marc Settle found his video suddenly of great interest to a wider new media than just his employer, the BBC: > Broadly, their behaviour fell in to one of three categories: a)
vertical video
Vertical Video barbarism infects the Washington Post [http://digiday.com/publishers/fight-washington-post-embracing-vertical-video/] > On Monday, the Post published a minute-long vertical video about the importance of Super Tuesday, which was told with animated graphics and meant to be watched with the sound off. The video, produced by politics video editor
drone journalism
A rather powerful example of the potential inherent in drone journalism
explainer journalism
A really useful explanation of Snapchat and how it works for those of us more generously endowed with years of experience. Good work from the WSJās Joanna Stern [http://www.wsj.com/video/snapchat-explained-using-snapchat/84712C9C-41D7-4C4F-AA4D-28AF383846AD.html] .
disney
Gaming vlogger PewDiePie is teaming with Disney to launch a new network [http://thenextweb.com/insider/2016/01/14/youtube-star-pewdiepie-partners-with-disney-to-launch-his-own-video-network/?utm_source=om&hb] Further evidence that the YouTube celebrity phenomenon is rapidly growing in a parallel media industry, that is then cross-breeding with traditional media: > After racking
shoreham life
Yesterday, I posted a video to Facebook [https://www.facebook.com/shorehamlife/videos/vb.141462645886975/1082267255139838/] that I threw together over coffee that morning. Itās just a compilation of the random clips of Shoreham by Sea (where I live) that I shot through the year. Rather gratifyingly, itās
vertical video
Maybe I am finally getting old, but this change depresses me: > According to several app makers and media companies, many of the worldās video consumers donāt seem to think vertical videos are wrong ā in fact, a lot of us prefer them. There is a simple explanation for