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Crowdsourcing Journalism

August 29th, 2009

I was very impressed when I heard BBC Radio Scotland’s Open All Mics program today. Rather than the live-game-with-studio-updates model which has dominated football radio broadcasting in Scotland since I can remember, Open All Mics mimics the format made popular by Jeff Stelling and his cronies on Sky Sports—Soccer Saturday, I believe they call it (though I’ve always thought myself a football fan!) The format is studio-based and features constant match updates from reporters at the different matches, and discussion between pundits when there’s not much happening.

Anyway, to business. Open All Mics has opened a Twitter account, and have been filling my feed with goal updates all afternoon, like a 2.0 version of the BBC’s legendary Vidiprinter. So far so good, but very one-way. What really impressed me today was that fans attending games were then invited to send in their own half-time reports. This brings in a whole new level of interactivity. While Richard Gordon and the team at the BBC are able to read out the ‘best’ ones, it also allows anyone with a Twitter account to read all of those @messages and get a real flavour of what’s going on around the country. It’s also a very, very cheap method of content generation for the Beeb, so everyone’s a winner, right? (The BBC have also started to read out messages left on the Pie and Bovril messageboard in their TV final score program – something that I have some slight reservations about, since it smacks a bit more of unlicensed use of content; unlike @messages, that are clearly meant for them to use.)

That aside, well done BBC Scotland, for an innovative use of the technology available to you.

Edit: I should say that Open All Mics can be followed at @openallmics!

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Twitter as Ceefax replacement

May 14th, 2009

I was up stupidly early the other day, and having already played World of Warcraft quite extensively, I stuck on the telly. I was delighted (and maybe a bit embarassed) to discover that they still show ‘Pages from Ceefax’ when there’s nothing else to put on in the morning. I was flooded with fond memories of reading Digitiser and the music pages on C4, and also of those times when a lack of TV or radio coverage meant that the only way of following some football matches was by sitting watching the Teletext pages tick round and cheering when you got a score update (one in your favour, at least).

Fast forward a few days, when I found a good friend stuck for coverage of a Scottish lower-league play-off; too low key for even local radio coverage, and no chance of even a sniff at live TV coverage (even BBC Alba have turned their nose up at it!) What solution then? It turns out that his local newspaper have a twitter account, and have sent a reporter to live tweet coverage from the final. Amazing stuff, and a brilliant use of the technology. I had a wee look at it and all in all, it’s not a terrible way to follow a game of football (better than watching teletext flick round anyway!) We came to the conclusion that the experience is not unlike watching a game of Championship Manager (and yeah, I know it’s called Football Manager now, but I like that think that since playing it since v1.0 on the Atari ST, I can call it Champ if I want. Same goes for Opal Fruits. n00bs.)

This is unlikely to become an entirely widespread way of consuming football. Most football that ordinary people care about is covered to the point of saturation in mainstream media, but I wonder how useful it would be for people who do support they many, many less-well-supported teams around the world. It all points to the power of Twitter as a medium, the power to live broadcast facts, views and thoughts from just about anywhere, and to build sporadic communities round about events through hashtagging. Wow. Credit to the Airdrie and Coatbridge Advertiser (twitter: @acadvertiser) for coming up with this. One thing though, if that was my paper, I would feel absolutely no shame about chucking out an occasional advert for the paper itself during the coverage, seems like a fair exchange; since not everyone is going to follow them, preferring instead to follow using a service like twitterfall.com

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