Behind-The-Scenes at "Largest Live Operation" on the Web
As one of the executive producers of the Convention live webcasts for washingtonpost.com/Newsweek last week in Denver and next week in St. Paul, Haddad is looking to make the web the newest way to bring TV news to an audience hungry for political coverage.
Rhodes, who also serves as an executive producer on the show, says the staff consists of people within the company. "We take people inside the company and train up on video," he says. "This is the largest live operation of any newspaper." "We have what everyone else wants," says Haddad. What features distinguish it from the cablers and networks?
Also, viewers can provide instant feedback about what they're seeing, and the producers can adjust accordingly. "We can give the best of both worlds," says Rhodes. "And we can do that because we're on the web." As for the ratings — Rhodes says the number of viewers are not released by washingtonpost.com. But he says the numbers are on par with the primaries, "or more," which amounts to "thousands of people." On Thursday, The Washington Post's Chris Cillizza anchored with Newsweek's Michael Isikoff. Below, video of the webcast as it goes live: Email This Post |
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