The traditional model of video news reporting has always
had two separate roles: reporting and videography. For
years, however, small-market news outlets have relied on
“one-man bands”—individual reporters who shoot and edit
their own video—for stories and footage. Lately, as the
journalism landscape has evolved, this controversial
practice has grown more and more popular. With the use of
video constantly expanding, many large-market TV stations,
networks, and newspaper Web sites are relying on one person
to carry out a job formerly executed by two. News outlets
now call these contributors VJs, digital journalists,
backpack journalists, or mobile journalists. But no matter
what they are called, there’s no denying the growing
significance of solo videojournalists to the media
landscape.
Going Solo: Doing Videojournalism in the 21st
Century details the controversy, history, and rise of
this news genre, but its main objective is to show aspiring
videojournalists how to learn the craft. While other
textbooks depict the conventional reporter-and-videographer
model, Going Solo innovates by teaching readers how
to successfully juggle the skills traditionally required of
two different people.
Award-winning journalist G. Stuart Smith begins by
describing how and why the media’s use of solo
videojournalists is growing, then delves into the
controversy over whether one person can cover a story as
well as two. He illuminates how, together, the downsizing
of the media, downturn in the economy, and growth of video
on the Web have led to the rise of the solo videojournalist
model. Going Solo profiles TV stations and
newspaper Web operations across the country that are using
the model and offers helpful advice from VJs in the field.
The book presents useful guidelines on how to multitask as
a reporter-videographer: conducting interviews, shooting
cover video, and writing and editing a good video
story. Readers will also learn how to produce
non-narrated stories and market themselves in a competitive
field.
Smith, who started his career as a “one-man band,”
insightfully covers an area of journalism that, despite its
growing market demand, has received little academic
attention. Going Solo: Doing Videojournalism in the 21st
Century is useful for students learning the basics and
those already in the field who need to upgrade their
skills. By presenting industry know-how and valuable
tips, this unique guidebook can help any enterprising
videojournalist create a niche for him- or herself in the
increasingly fragmented news media market.