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The Best of News21: 2009

Thursday, January 21st, 2010

Best of News21, 2009

For 2009, the collective efforts of the News21 fellows produced dozens of in-depth packages, exploring a range of issues facing a changing nation, from education to technology to energy.

Some of it deserves a special spotlight, and a half-dozen examples of stellar journalism and presentation are featured on a newly launched page, The Best of News21, at best.news21.com.

This work, supported by the Carnegie Corp. and the Knight Foundation, reflects packaging on complex stories on Muslim-American youth, a voter’s generation gap, the U.S. energy grid, charter schools and tribal cleansing. Take some time to explore each of these exemplar and representative stories from the News21 fellows. And read the press release.

Visuals: ‘Traveling Virgin’ package explained

Monday, August 17th, 2009

Deanna Dent is a talented multimedia reporter who had been mulling a photographically intensive project on the Virgin of Guadalupe for some time before becoming a News21 fellow  (she’s now a post-grad intern at the Sun Sentinel in south Florida) . The Virgin’s story is unique. What began as a purely “Latina” religious character has transcended all ethnic, national and cultural boundaries. Deanna felt the story could be best told using multiple content formats, especially since she had hundreds of images to tell different facets of the story.  She also wanted to let viewers skip to any part of the story they wanted to at any time. She proposed providing only the barest form of linear structure — in the form of three main “pods” with branching “subpods.” News21 visual reporting instructor Andrew Long helped Deanna conceive of the design framework. She then worked with Web developer Britton Halle to complete the project. We have seldom seen media presented in this fashion on news Web sites.

Graphic: The secret ingredients in your food

Thursday, July 30th, 2009

The Secret Ingredients in Your Food from Powering a Nation on Vimeo.

I wanted something memorable for our viewers that quickly connected food and fossil fuels. The term “eating oil” is sometimes used in text articles to highlight the use of fossil fuels in the U.S. industrial food system. How do I represent “eating oil” visually? I had an idea of taking photos of people with oil coming out of their mouths like a horror movie, a play on “you are what you eat.”

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Explore & Compare: Asian Face of Las Vegas by USC

Monday, July 27th, 2009
Jung's original package.

The presentation integrates multiple formats in four segments.

gallery and video on a single page.

Her story on the Las Vegas Sun's site has a gallery and video on a single page.

Which version do you prefer and why?
From left: The original with multiple entry points; the Las Vegas Sun’s treatment, with all assets on a single page. Click on each to study the differences. Please comment below.

ABOUT THIS REPORTING PROJECT
In most cases, profiles are pretty straightforward. You should give the reader a vivid sense of the person’s background, personality  and what they do that makes them newsworthy. In print, the profile can have a more defined chronological structure than in broadcast, where the writing has to follow good (or available) video.

In reporting on the Asian community in Las Vegas — the fastest growing in the nation — I chose to produce three multimedia profiles. It called for a new approach to storytelling about an individual.

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Storytelling: Budget cuts threaten transparency

Monday, July 27th, 2009

The California prison system is massive. With roughly 173,000 inmates, 33 prisons, a $10 billion budget and a never ending blame game, the story of where the prison system went wrong isn’t an easy one to tell.  Over the past two years during California’s slide into recession and near bankruptcy, there has been no shortage of headlines about how the state is falling apart.

No area of the budget has been safe. Education spending is down, programs are being cut and innovative projects are being put on the back burner. I wanted to put a human face (or voice) to the other side of the budget crisis and show how investing a small amount of money in prison rehabilitation now can have big returns, both financially and socially, in the long run. To do that, I chose to focus my story on a tiny population within the prison system that doesn’t usually get a voice – women.

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Reporting: Tell it even when you can’t see it

Monday, July 27th, 2009

The vast majority of American towns are overlooked. If you’re not in the hub of city activity or living in a place exposed by The New York Times for its engrossing and unique attributes, there is little chance to tell the story of one community to the next.  But when that story does pop up, and hasn’t been granted its due coverage, what does one do to make the story shine when it has otherwise been left to dull and rust?

Enter the innovation.

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Mixed media: Sharpening the tools

Monday, July 27th, 2009

As a multimedia journalist, I was excited about the opportunity to participate in News21 for the express purpose of telling multiple stories across various media platforms. And the experience has lived up to my expectations of sharpening my multimedia storytelling tools.  I chose to use video, audio, still images as well as mapping tools for to tell my stories about the complex water conflicts in the Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta.

I chose to use video predominantly because of its strong ability to transport the reader to the Delta. One of the challenges I identified quickly with my story was overcoming the main questions: What is the Delta? What does the Delta look like? And who are the people concerned with the Delta? For me, video was the best way to bring the viewer directly into my story to see, hear, and feel the Delta and its constituents.  Moreover, since the story is about an environment – three-dimensional seeing becomes believing.

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Packaging: Piecing It Together

Monday, July 27th, 2009

When approaching this project, “The Agony of the California Entrepreneur,”  I wanted to tell the story from the perspective of multiple people.  I thought the best way was to pick three or four subjects that represented the different trends in business that California is experiencing.  I wanted to show how entrepreneurs were adjusting to the recession and what dilemmas they faced.  The interactive map was the piece that integrated the different stories together to show where businesses were heading and why they were based in their geographic location.

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Approach: The Multimedia Blender

Sunday, July 26th, 2009

When thinking about the terms “multimedia” and “innovation” in the context of journalism, it’s difficult to truly catch someone’s attention with a pitch, or to even have the conversation without talking about Mediastorm.

The problem lies in the notion that to be innovative is merely to have multimedia. But in this thinking, the media itself is often still compartmentalized into traditional buckets of audio, video, and photography. They are also slotted into traditional, linear storytelling as complimentary aspects to a straight-arrow narrative. Brian Storm, to his credit, gets this.

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The trouble with cannibalism: challenges in reporting across media

Thursday, July 16th, 2009

Photo by StefZ. Used under a Creative Commons license.

One of the biggest challenges I’m facing as a journalist right now is the threat that my stories will eat each other alive.

At Powering A Nation, our team has a wide range of journalism skills, including photography, writing, programming and graphic design.

This range of skills means we can choose the best medium to tell each story.

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