TUESDAY, JULY 29, 2008
"No Snitching": A Multimedia Project
Take a look at this multimedia project
that probes whether and why residents of the East End of Newport News,
Va., have shut down and stopped talking to cops. The cops say the "no
snitching" code is stopping them from solving serious crimes including
murders. This story may be applicable in other cities.
The project was part of the
Kiplinger Program in Public Affairs Journalism at The Ohio State University and was produced by
Hank Wilson for the
Daily Press.
I interviewed Hank via e-mail about the project:
Tompkins: What did you learn about the power of interactive storytelling by doing this project?Wilson:
To me, the power of interactive storytelling is how it allows the
subject of the story to talk directly to the viewer. The user can see
the emotions and hear the nuance of the subject's story. In the case of
the "No Snitching" project, there are a lot of preconceived ideas about
the people who live in the East End section of Newport News. Almost
every non-resident of that area who sees the barbershop video comments
on how thoughtful and strong the women are. Or how angry Mr. Robinson
is. How sad it is for Travis to live his life with little hope of
change. They have a new understanding of what it's like to live there
after seeing and hearing them talk about the area's problems.
I'm
surprised how fast users change their opinions about the area once they
see real people and not stereotypes live there. It becomes hard for
them to hold the same view they did just minutes before even if they
don't agree with what is being said. I don't think they would have
these new feelings about the people who live in the East End from a
newspaper story.
How was this story different from what you might have done in a print-only story or an audio slideshow?Wilson:
In both a traditional narrative print story and a Soundslides show you
can control how the reader or viewer receives the information. The Web
is nonlinear. People click all over the place and they're impatient.
Users never follow the chapter format. I purposely didn't make the
stories flow one into the other just for that reason. I think this is
one of the things that really scares print journalists, the lack of
control over the story's narrative flow. It was fun and a challenge to
make each part stand alone so an impatient user might only see one
video or just the interactive map but would come away with some
understanding about the East End area and no snitching.
What do you want readers/online users of this project to learn?Wilson:
I didn't start the project with an agenda. I just wanted to find out
why that area of town was so reluctant to help the police. But, I hope
people learn that "No Snitching" is not a one-dimensional, hip hop
culture-inspired issue. In the case of the East End, it's about feeling
abandoned by the city of Newport News. I hope people who visit the Web
site see that the people who live in the East End are not all drug
dealers and gangbangers, but citizens with real social problems.
You
are an experienced art director with tons of awards to your credit.
This is way different from what you have done in the past. What did you
have to learn to pull this project off and what advice would you give
to other journalists who need to learn new skills to survive and thrive
these days? Wilson:
I had never shot or edited video. I had to learn how to think and see
in video. I had never captured audio. I'm now acutely aware of all the
background noise that surrounds us. I had never built a Web site. I had
to learn some software programs like Final Cut Pro, Flash and
Dreamweaver. I had to learn how to use a video camera and a digital
recorder. I'm forever indebted to the Kiplinger fellowship program for
the six months it gave me to figure out the technology and for the
support while I was reporting the project.
These
are just bits of technology anyone can learn. The news business has
always had change. When I started there was hot type, IBM typewriters
and darkrooms. The skills you have as a journalist are what matters.
The ability to put people at ease and have them talk with you. The
ability to find and tell a compelling story. I'm not one of the tribe
that feels new media is the downfall of journalism. I think it's an
incredibly exciting way to tell stories, one that allows reporters more
options in getting the story into the hands of the public and one that
breaks the reporter free from the bonds of the traditional newspaper
story.
My advice to anyone
who wants to learn multimedia skills is to start doing it. Make a
small, one-minute movie a day. Figure out how to see in video. Watch
lots of documentaries and see how a story is told visually. Check out
all the Web sites that post multimedia stories. Find a class that will
teach you video editing or Flash; there are lots of them online. But
most of all don't be afraid and get started.
Posted at 12:05:00 AM
Categories: Community journalism, Visual journalism, Video, Multimedia: Tools and technology, Documentary journalism, Crime reporting, Best Practices: Online & Multimedia , Best Practices
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