Friday, October 14, 2011

Web Content

I'm a proponent of putting public radio content on the station Website...first. 
There...I feel better already for admitting it. Many listeners are getting news on-line. They're not waiting for the hard structures of the newscast deadline. Once a feature is finished why not post it? You don't have to wait for an airing to try to push listeners to your Website. 


For some stations with the resources there's web only content.


There are two examples of Web only content this week. The most prominent is the announcement out of WNYC that Alec Baldwin will be posting 20 podcasts over the next several months called, Here’s the Thing.” According to a New York Times Blog by Dave Itzkoff and WNYC the interviews will allow Mr. Baldwin to “pursue his passions and interests through conversations with a variety of news makers, artists, actors, writers and public figures who spark his fancy.” There are tentative plans to make the podcasts into radio programs with additional  content from other producers.


The second example is from WBUR in Boston. WBUR and reporter Martha Bebinger launched Healthcare Savvy, an online community of patients who are starting to shop for health care based on quality and cost. It's and example of crowd sourcing information. Healthcare Savvy has more than 150 members. It's a mix of patient and healthcare providers. According to Amanda Hirsch of PBS' Media ShiftHealthcare Savvy was born to provide a space for discussion as well as a compendium of resources on health costs.  The project is funded in part by the California Endowment Health Journalism Fellowships, a program of the University of Southern California's Annenberg School for Communication and Journalism.

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