With newsrooms short on time and traditional media
outlets cutting budgets, these three storytellers have found ways to report
what they think is important in ways that consumers think are engaging. Rosenberg,
Fennell and Jensen were among the speakers at the recent Byron Bay Writers
Festival examining the tension between old media formats like newspaper and
radio, and the new platforms of social media, websites and podcasting. Can they
all co-exist? Should they?
Noah Rosenberg in conversation with Jacqui Park |
In the bright, Byron Bay morning light, New York City
resident, Noah Rosenberg, is in conversation with Jacqui Park, Chief Executive
of the Walkley Foundation. Rosenberg is the founder of Narrative.ly, a website dedicated to telling human stories, mostly
in the shape of long-form articles, but also video and photo journalism.
Revealing what drove him to start his nearly-three year old company, Rosenberg
says that after years of rushing to file stories each day on print
publications, he ‘wanted a place to do something deeper and tell the stories
that fall through the cracks.’
To combat oversaturation and reader apathy in the 24 hour
news cycle, Rosenberg’s formula is to publish only one story online each day.
This means readers have time to absorb what’s being offered and to connect
emotionally with the subject.
In line with the current trend for analytics, where everything we do online can be measured and evaluated, Rosenberg and his team try to pinpoint exactly what makes us linger on some stories longer than others. The answer is emotion. ‘Without emotion, what’s the point?’, he says.
Full house at the Byron Bay Writers Festival |
As the lunchtime queues disperse, a panel with a combined
work history of about 80 years in journalism settles in to consider the future
of newsmaking, and who’s really in charge.
In the blue corner are the
heavyweights, George Megalogenis, former senior reporter at The Australian and author of several
acclaimed books on modern Australian politics and economics, and Kate
McClymont, award-winning investigative journalist at the Sydney Morning Herald. In the red corner, representing the agile,
flexible Generation Y, are TV and radio producer and presenter, Marc Fennell,
and former Fairfax journalist and now editor of The Saturday Paper, Erik Jensen.
But, as even she admits, it’s impossible
to dismiss the extent to which her continued success in the field is dependent
on her employer, Fairfax Media,
allowing her to pursue such in-depth, time consuming and sometimes costly work.
In her spirited manner, McClymont also readily embraces new technologies to
engage with her audience, regularly tweeting from inside court rooms to make
the proceedings more exciting for readers.
Megalogenis, who has turned his skilled prose into books and
documentary series recently, provides a grounding, comforting presence on the
panel. His calm explanations of political history and the development of
Australian media culture envelop and comfort like the warm fibres of a cable-knit
cardigan.
Megalogenis laments the constant interruptions that online news
reporting has brought to the reporter’s day.
‘You can’t write a story that people are going to remember if you are constantly chasing the next minute’s headlines’, he argues.
While funding is being cut for in-depth storytelling across
other mediums, long-form journalism in the radio world has found a home in
podcasting, says Fennell, who presents a weekly technology podcast on Radio
National. He reckons, ‘if it weren’t for podcasts, RN would have been mothballed years ago’. Instead, this modern
audio platform has made RN’s particularly segmented, niche reporting accessible
and lasting for a greater audience.
Jensen, like Rosenberg, went out on his own to deliver content
that he thinks traditional newspapers are increasingly unable to provide. With
his weekly publication, The Saturday
Paper, Jensen is meeting what he sees as a need for less trivial, more
trustworthy reporting, choosing to focus on long-form journalism and expert
analysis in a print format.
Half of his audience, says Jensen, are reading
papers for the first time. Perhaps they’re after an experience, not just
content, wanting to flip through a paper instead of scrolling down, down, down.
If the schoolboys are proving anything, it’s that the
playground is much bigger than we all thought. And, for the time being, there’s
room for everyone.
For more insights from other speakers at the Byron Bay Writers Festival 2015 see this article published over at www.aphramag.com
For more insights from other speakers at the Byron Bay Writers Festival 2015 see this article published over at www.aphramag.com
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