The new comedy series “The Paper” may be about newspapers, but it also hits uncomfortably close to home for the TV news business.
Category: Newsroom Notes
Newsroom Notes: The Future of Local TV is Already Streaming
After decades of audience erosion, the model for how legacy TV operates is changing quickly. One thing is clear: the only future for local media is local content.
More Than A Dozen New Newscasts, Magazines Launch in Upper Midwest
With the new TV season beginning, more than a dozen new local newscasts and programs have launched on Upper Midwest stations this month.
Newsroom Notes: What Life Is Really Like for Broadcast Journalists
Even before recent staffing shortages, the news business already faced more challenges than most industries with a lot of stressors, especially for young journalists.
Newsroom Notes: Giving Your Own News to the Competition First
I wouldn’t believe it unless I’d seen it happen repeatedly: Media outlets sometimes give their own news to other media outlets to report first.
Newsroom Notes: Knowledge about Knowledge Helpful in Real Life, Too
In everyday life, people are free to make assumptions and jump to conclusions even if they don’t have the evidence to back it up. In the news business, that could land you in court.
Newsroom Notes: Coverage Beyond National Ice Cream Sandwich Day
As newsrooms try to keep up with what’s trending, it can be easy to forget why we’re here. The audience is coming to us because we’re local.
Newsroom Notes: Sweeps Week? Sweeps Month? TV Ratings Basics Explained
Ratings, share, impression, what do they mean? Is there such a thing as a “sweeps week” or “sweeps month?”
Newsroom Notes: State News or Local News? They’re Intertwined
Local and state news are so intertwined on broadcast TV news that you can’t separate them. This makes it challenging to provide state news to “orphan counties.”
Newsroom Notes: How to Develop Positive Relationships with Journalists
Public relations sometimes gets a negative reputation. When done right, PR can be good for the organization, the media, and the public as a whole.
