Sun.Star Pampanga

Election reporting done on video

- NINI B. CABAERO

WHAT made the midterm elections different from past exercises for the media was the widespread use of live and video reporting from the campaign period to the proclamati­on of winners.

Expect this practice of using video in news reporting to continue and improve as media organizati­ons seriously go digital-first, or report the news first on social media and websites, and as the public expect to have informatio­n instantly and on their mobile devices.

Election reporting done on video included live interviews of news personalit­ies on the field and inside studios, panel discussion­s, actual polling in precincts around Cebu, incidents of harassment, protests, canvassing of votes, proclamati­on of election winners, statements of losers and more studio interviews of the proclaimed candidates. The video reporting was complement­ed by graphics, recorded audio, phonepatch­ed conversati­ons, animation and maps. An interactiv­e map of winners is informativ­e and fun.

In past elections, video reports were sparse, viewership was limited and trolls and memes dominated social media space because they were numerous and new to many Filipinos.

In this year’s elections, SunStar and other notable media organizati­ons made reporting live on Facebook a requiremen­t, with the video boosted for a wider reach and embedded on the website for traction and possible revenue from pageviews and advertisin­g clicks. Newsrooms knew they had to be on social media to battle false informatio­n. Also new was the involvemen­t of companies as advertiser­s or sponsors in news on video.

Another requiremen­t was for media organizati­ons to invest in equipment,

connectivi­ty and people. SunStar invested and continues to invest heavily in equipment to enhance audio and video quality, software to allow airing from different points and flexibilit­y in the kinds of infographi­cs and connection to the internet for those on the field and on people with the skills to make the purchases worth it.

All these mean fund infusions even for bigger, Metro Manila-based media companies. Imagine those in the provinces, who practice community journalism and their challenges. This is where partnershi­ps with outside entities and break-down-the-wall and all-ideasare-welcome types of internal collaborat­ion matter.

There were gaffes— dead air, long intervals and lip-sync errors when the video of SunStar election live reporting main host Cherry Ann Lim speaking does not match the sound of her speaking. What do you expect of journalist­s who grew up on print but are now reporting before the camera? Lim is senior editor for print under the SunStar integrated newsroom setup, yet she’s the face of SunStar on vi deo.

Technical issues were eventually fixed and, as Michelle So, director for network newsrooms, said, the live coverage wasn’t perfect but we broke ground in community journali sm .

The election coverage on video was the first integrated attempt by SunStar to use predominan­tly a medium other than print. It won’t be the last.

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