Эпизоды
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What kinds of videos work on social media? What kind of videos go viral? Brendan Miller is a producer with BBC Three. He has been involved in some of the most viral videos produced by the BBC, clocking up millions of views. Mark Egan spoke to him at a conference in Vilnius in Lithuania. This interview covered what works with social video both as far as content goes as well as the technical side of things.
You can follow Mark Egan on Twitter and Instagram at @markeganvideo
http://www.purplebridgemedia.com
Brendan Miller is at https://twitter.com/brenkjm
Brendan's Blog https://brenkjm.wordpress.com/
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Panu Karhunen is from Ilta Sanomat, a Finnish newspaper and TV channel. He has spent a year at the Reuters Institute at Oxford University. He has been looking into the idea that mobile journalists appear less intimidating, so can get more interviews and more intimacy. In this episode Mark Egan asks him what his research has discovered and what that means for journalism.
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Пропущенные эпизоды?
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Help for Heroes was ranked the number 1 brand for emotional storytelling in the Aesop survey 2016. Communications Director, Robin Punt, explains how they are using videos shot on mobile phones to help achieve this.
To contact me pls tweet me @markeganvideo or go to http://www.purplebridgemedia.com
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What are the issues mobile journalists will be discussing at Mojocon in Galway this year. Mark Egan speaks to Glen Mulcahy from RTE, who is the founder and organiser of the conference. He talks about advances in technology, but also threats to the media.
To contact Mark tweet @markeganvideo
Mojocon information can be found at https://mojocon.rte.ie/
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In this episode Mark Egan speaks to Corinne Podger. Corinne is founder of the Mojo London and Mojo Sydney Meet-ups. She is a lecturer in mobile journalism at Macleay College in Melbourne. Most recently she was a senior digital journalism trainer at Fairfax Media in Sydney. She has also worked as a journalism trainer for BBC Media Action and Thomson Reuters Foundation.
To contact mark just tweet @markeganvideo or go to http://www.purplebridgemedia.com
To contact Corinne Podger Tweet @corinne_podger
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Mobile technology is moving so fast it is sometimes hard to keep up. As we approach the end of 2016, Mark Egan speaks to technology journalist David McClelland. He covers the current state of mobile technology, the areas to watch and why some technologies might never take off.
David McClelland is a well-respected technology journalist and television presenter. He appears on major tv programmes on BBC and ITV and has his finger on the pulse of current technology trends.
To ask a question please contact Mark Egan on Twitter @markeganvideo or go to http://www.purplebridgemedia.com
To contact David go to http://www.davidmcclelland.co.uk/
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Mike Castellucci has had a long career in television, but in recent years has become best known for his half hour TV shows "Phoning it in" on WFAA in Texas. He won Emmy's for these programmes and is now also a professor at Michigan State University. So how did he go about making an entire TV show and what is he teaching the next generation?
Mike speaks to Mark Egan about how he used his phone to capture stories about the human condition and what advice he has for others wanting to do the same.
Mark is on Twitter and Instagram as @markeganvideo and Mike Castellucci is on Twitter as @MikeCastellucci
If you enjoyed this podcast please leave a review on iTunes and we love any direct feedback or suggestions too.
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With cloud video editing, the hard-work is done on servers somewhere on the internet, rather than on your local device. WeVideo is a platform used by news organisations, businesses and education institutions. It allows you to do editing on your device and even do complex video editing using just your internet browser.
Erik Raestad from WeVideo joins me from Norway to talk about how this cloud video editing works and why will see more of it in the future. Will this mean it becomes irrelevant whether you are on an iPhone, Android phone or a tablet?
To find out more about we video go to http://www.wevideo.com
For comments on this podcast please tweet @markeganvideo or leave a review on iTunes or Stitcher
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Does shooting on a phone mean people are more willing to be interviewed by you? Is mobile journalism the way to give a voice to people and areas that do not usually get represented in the media?
Geertje Algera has been a mobile journalist at Dutch broadcaster KRO NCRV for two years. In this episode she explains how she has used her phone to cover religion, discrimination and many other difficult topics.
Please leave a review if you like this podcast and tweet your comments to @markeganvideo
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Josh Apter is the founder of Padcaster, which has been featured in an Apple commercial. His company makes accessories to allow professional filmmaking using iPhones, iPads and other mobile devices.
In this episode of the Mobile Content Creators Show, Josh tells Mark Egan how he created the first prototype and how education has really embraced his invention. Josh has a background in film-making and talks about the issues that led him to embrace mobile film-making.
To comment on this episode please tweet me @markeganvideo
For mobile journalism training go to http://www.purplebridgemedia.com
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View News is a hyper-local news service on the Sunshine Coast, Queensland, Australia. It is run with a business model that does not rely on advertising. It's founder, Charles Hodgson, talks to Mark Egan in this episode about how mobile journalism and social media platforms are making this viable.
Charles explains why the news industry needs to change and why mobile is now THE way to create and consume news stories.
He also talks about the iPhone accessories and workflow he uses and how he hopes to scale this news service. Is this a model that can make hyper-local news viable worldwide?
If you enjoy this podcast please leave a review and you can contact Mark on Twitter @markeganvideo
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Can you film and edit professional-standard videos on Android phones, or is iPhone the only game in town? Matthew Feinberg is the Product lead of editing app Kinemaster. This allows multi-layered video editing with advanced sound mixing and greenscreen capabilities. So is Android overtaking iPhone for mobile journalism and filmmaking?
In this podcast Michael explains the history of Kinemaster and stay tuned till the end to hear some exclusive teasers of what they will be offering in the future.
If you like this podcast please leave a review. To make a comment just tweet @markeganvideo
To contact Mark go to http://www.purplebridgemedia.com
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Yusuf Omar is the new mobile editor of the Hindustan Times. Indian is a country of around a billion people. How can you cover it when it is so vast and there are so many different mobile devices. Yusuf is aiming to build a network of 750 mobile journalists using smartphones and snapchat to create video and social content. In this podcast he tells Mark Egan why he is going down that route and how you can tell a story using snapchat.
Connect with Mark on Twitter or snapchat @markeganvideo
and Yusuf @YusufOmarSA
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Virtual reality headsets and 360 degree video cameras are improving every year. Sarah Jones is the Deputy Head of the School of Media and Performing Arts at Coventry University. She has designed courses on immersive journalism and is on the cutting edge of the latest developments in VR.
In this podcast, Sarah explains why virtual reality is a big deal, how VR can be social and what kit and apps she recommends.
If you enjoy the podcast please post a review in iTunes or Stitcher. To post a question or a guest suggestion, please tweet me at @markeganvideo
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If you were building a newsroom from scratch today, what would you do? That is the opportunity presented to Geoff Roth in Charlotte, North Carolina. With a much smaller team than its rivals, Geoff helped bring about a newsroom that used smartphones and tiny cameras to fill TV news bulletins and the website.
On this edition of the Mobile Content Creators Show Geoff tells Mark Egan what he did and how he went about building a newsroom in a totally different way.
Follow Mark on twitter @markeganvideo and Geoff is @GeoffFox26
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Platforms like snapchat, Facebook Live and Instagram are helping the European Handball Federation build a community of sports fans. Not everyone has the financial resources of bigger sports like football, so how can you use a team using mobile phones to create content on a budget?
Thomas Schoeineich from the EHL in Vienna explains to Mark Egan how they cover major tournaments using just an iPhone, monopod and cheap microphone. He also talks about how communications teams have to learn to allow more personality on social media accounts.
Follow mark on twitter at @markeganvideo and see the content Thomas is talking about at @EHF_Live
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If you were at the location of a news story and you shot video, who would you send it to and would you expect to get paid? News organisations are also struggling to verify that footage that comes in is genuine. Verifeye Media allows users to download the app and send the footage straight to them. They can verify where it came from and sell it on. The person who filmed it then gets a percentage of the earnings. Is this the future for mobile video content in news? John D McHugh tells Mark Egan how it works and why he thinks many people get ripped off when they give their footage to news outlets.
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Nick Garnett is a BBC reporter with BBC Radio 5 Live. He uses his iPhone for recording and editing audio. He also shoots video and uses live-streaming to bring the big stories to his audience. Last year he faced big reporting challenges while covering the Nepal earthquake and Paris terror attacks.
In this show Nick tells Mark Egan the apps and accessories he uses. He also explains how mobile content creation is changing his job....and possibly even threatening it.
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Irish broadcaster RTE have aired dozens of pieces on television which have been shot on iPhones. Mark Egan talks to Head of Innovation for RTE Technology, Glen Mulcahy. In this show, Glen tells me what made them start filming on phones, the struggle to persuade some of his colleagues and why mobile journalism can no longer be ignored.
He also thinks mobile devices are so important for the media in general he has organised a conference in Dublin for everything mobile. Mojocon 2016 follows on the from the success of the first event last year. http://mojocon.rte.ie/