Email this morning from Pat Younge, President of the Travel Channel.*
He sends me a link from The Guardian, that BILD, the German newspaper has partnered with a German supermarket to sell small cameras and field an army of citizen journalists to feed the paper’s website.
Sounds good to me, but I think they need a training course!
Germany’s bestselling newspaper is looking to expand without the expense of actually hiring new reporters.
Bild has joined up with discount supermarket chain Lidl to sell a basic digital camera to a legion of citizen journalists, who the tabloid hopes will contribute images to its coverage.
“We can’t cover everything,” said Michael Paustian, a Bild managing editor. “We think it is an advance for journalism.”
The pocket-sized camera has 2GB of memory, can shoot still pictures and video, and costs €69.99 (£60). It comes with software and a USB port that allows “reader-reporters” to upload content directly to editors who will be assigned to review it for publication.
Bild spokesman Tobias Fröhlich said the goal was to encourage camera owners to seek the widest exposure for their work. “It’s not about exclusivity,” he said.
The move fits in with a broader trend for traditional media to turn their increasingly interactive readers into news providers.
Vancouver-based NowPublic.com gathers photographs, video clips and news tips from the public and distributes them to news organisations. The trend is likely to continue as traditional news providers scramble to match the migration of readers and advertisers to the internet.
Bild, known for breaking major political stories as well as front-page splashes on zoo animals and celebrities, will use the new cameras to streamline an existing scheme that brings in thousands of photos each day by email and text message, Fröhlich said. The paper has published 9,000 of those images since 2006.
He said Bild may pay for the best ones it uses or establish a contest for the best content submitted each week; details would be worked out after gauging demand for the cameras that go on sale today.
Some worry that Bild’s new media experiment will lower standards and interfere with professional reporting.
“It poses a threat to quality journalism, the more images from non-professionals that are pushed on to the market even though professional images are available,” said Eva Werner, a spokeswoman for the German Journalists’ Association
But Paustian thought the opposite was true. “We’re not YouTube,” he said. “Every contribution will be viewed, reviewed and journalistically evaluated.”
*and this just in from NZ correspondent Alan Morrison
6 Comments
eblogworld March 10, 2009
Great article! I’m loving your website;
Stephen B G Ball December 07, 2008
What about trying this in London?(England)
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invitedmedia December 05, 2008
michael,
you or your beautiful new wife might consider meeting with arianna huffington… she just landed a few bucks to expand, needs video.
just launched a ‘world’ section.
John Nox December 04, 2008
Thank you very much! very useful information, it is useful for my work on the Internet! +1
Malcolm Thomson December 04, 2008
Many would say it is not possible to “lower the standard of Bild’s reporting”, but in this context that’s beside the point. Jeff Jarvis posted video from Davos of hisa chat with Bild editor Kai Diekmann who was much impressed by the cheap-but-cheerful Flip camcorder. So maybe that triggered off this project.
It is, of course, a brilliant notion. And if the ‘citizens’ cannot benefit from the Rosenblum training maybe someone will have the idea of translating into German the excellent ‘how to’ for video-makers on the Current TV website.