Just as the digital world needs more content, perhaps TV news stations need more journalists -- at a price, anyway.
Fresco News will be working with Fox TV stations, offering to pay “citizen journalists” as much as $50 per video and $20 for a still photograph
if their content is used on the air.
Sounds like a good deal for TV news shows, especially considering what local TV news futurists have long discussed about “hyper-local” news
efforts: niche, neighborhood-by-neighborhood TV news content.
This goes hand in hand with local TV stations’ plans for local multicast digital signals, as extra TV-media platforms for
news and other TV content. To date, few have capitalized on this trend.
People have used smartphones to produce “user-generated video”-- cats riding around on donkeys; young men
trying to dunk a basketball in their backyards only to wind up in some dumpster -- virtually all for free to digital video platforms.
But consider this: Cultivating premium local TV news video
takes work, and journalistic skills, in determining what is news and what isn’t. Fresco News doesn’t let users go it alone; it has a 24/7 assignment desk where citizen journalists can
respond to a potential news situation. Fresco does “qualify” these video shooters, as well as evaluating if the news situations are safe to cover.
For a long time, AOL’s
Patch local news effort seemed to play in the arena of neighborhood niche news. Two years ago there was massive layoffs after hundreds of millions of dollars were spent on the project. Patch is now a
shell of its former self.
This current citizen journalism local TV effort seem
to mimic that effort. But just a cautionary tale here: Local TV news operations aren’t interested in a quick fix, but long-term answers with staying power.