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Ending the passive relationship with local news

Tom Cheredar's picture
by Tom Cheredar on June 23, 2008 - 8:18pm.

Nashville is talking, but it never used to. Not even a year ago Tennessee’s capital city was just reading and watching, maybe blogging a little bit— but no talking, no commenting, and definitely no tweeting.

For those not privy to the slang, a “tweet” is a single 140-character message sent via twitter.com and Nashville has been sending an awful lot of them, according to WKRN broadcast news producer Christian Grantham.

“I didn’t come to Twitter until last year, after pretty much everyone in Nashville had already jumped on board,” says Grantham, who now uses the service daily as the voice of the station’s NashvilleIsTalk.com — a site devoted to interacting with the community.

Rather than use a standard template developed for a group of organizations under the same corporate ownership, NIT uses a customized Drupal theme, which allows for easy integration with other social sites such as twitter, blogger, and other blog sites.

NashvilleIsTalking.com all but abolishes the need for staple feature pieces like “man-on-the-street.” Rather than one person being tasked with asking strangers a common question for the community’s reaction, you can now visit NIT. Registered users can maintain profiles, create and moderate groups, vote on aggregated content, browse the comments of Nashville area Twitter users, read Nashville-area blogs and much more.

In addition to its social networking components, Grantham uses the site’s front page to debut the story he’s working on through out the day, which gives the community a chance to improve the direction of information and often fill in gaps in reporting, he says.

“It has really become an important tool for me in the newsroom. Not only am I able to share breaking news items, but I also share news leads that come from Twitter with the producers.

“Had I joined Twitter when everyone else did I’d probably still be tweeting what I ate for lunch,” Grantham says.

For more insight into how to make local news interactive, check out Grantham’s responses to interview questions below:

What attracted you to the job of community-journalist for NIT / WKRN?

I rediscovered a passion and began searching for a job in communications using the web. WKRN stood out to me for a couple of reasons. Most importantly they seemed to have a clear vision of the role the net can play in connecting directly with an audience.

How much of NIT was realized before the site was created?

The concept of the site being a single authored blog had already been in place by the time I got here. It used a MovableType platform at the time. All the content was created by one author, and [a mix of] paid and volunteer authors on the weekend. Shortly after arriving, I migrated NIT to the more open-source platform Drupal, which opened us up to using a world of plugins. I created other blogs for staff and also balanced that with producing an evening newscast. It was a very difficult balancing act.

When management changed, NIT went through a widely noted transition period that was very difficult on the community. We lost our blogger, Brittney Gilbert, who was viewed as a voice for the community. It took some time before I could focus full time on the site. Once I could, I worked with a sister station to transform the site into something more than a blog.

What has changed since then?

Now the site does much more than current blog platforms can. Registered users can maintain profiles, create and moderate their own groups, vote on aggregated content, browse the tweets of Nashville area Twitter users, quickly see what Nashville area bloggers are posting about in the NIT Cloud (a cloud of terms aggregated from the daily posts of more than 250 area blogs), and a lot more. The site literally provides over 100,000 RSS feeds of any topic you can imagine. If you want a feed of all Nashville area blog posts about the Titans, you got it.

The investment in Nashville Is Talking by new management has allowed it to become a powerful and robust extension of the original vision of providing the community a platform to connect with each other based on their shared values and interests. The more robust community-driven platform also brings a dose of reality to that vision in terms of creating a more viable community-driven model. The model before that had predictable problems that are addressed by turning the site over to the community.

When did you become familiar with twitter, digg, and other social networking tools?

I became familiar with social networking tools in 2000. In 1999, I began what is now called “blogging” at my own personal website. I was manually posting and archiving entries. Shortly after that, a friend introduced me to MovableType. Things snowballed from there. Before that, I used BBS’s. Things have really changed over the past 12 years!

Would you call yourself an early adopter of new technology?

I don’t view myself as an early adopter of technologies. After the “dot com” era of the late ‘90s, I tend to follow everyone else’s pain and then settle on what works. I’m not in a rush to show off the fact that I bought the latest gadget. I like to show off the fact that I bought what works [at a] way cheaper [price] and with upgrades, even if that means coming a year late. I didn’t come to Twitter until last year, after pretty much everyone in Nashville had already jumped on board.

How has the community interaction changed your reporting?

It really has become an important tool for me in the newsroom. Not only am I able to share breaking news items, but I can also share news leads that come from Twitter with the producers. Since using it this way, I’ve noticed [that community interaction has] started to become widely discussed and reported. Had I joined Twitter when everyone else did I’d probably still be tweeting what I ate for lunch.

[From previous question:] Any examples come to mind?

I think the perfect example of my own evolving use of Twitter is in disseminating valuable information from the newsroom. One example came during the deadly tornadoes. I tweeted reported rotations in real time. I also fed reports from the field back into the newsroom. I used Twitter recently to live tweet a police chase on I-40 a couple of weeks ago, knowing people read their tweets in traffic.

Do you actively search for Nashville folks with a web presence?

I do actively seek new Nashville area blogs to add to the NIT site. I also find them through Twitter. I also have them emailed to me from people that want to be aggregated on the site.

Many organizations are just now shifting to a social network-based Web site rather than the usual news and content-only sites. (The NYT’s just introduced Times people to their site)…Why or why not is this easier at a local level?

It’s a double-edged sword. Larger national media outlets have the resources to invest in development or re-skinning open source platforms and molding them in their own image or crafting them to fit their strategic vision. On a local level, resources are often hard to come by, and what you get is a cobbling of platforms to achieve the same thing. That said, on a local level is where you grow the kind of dedicated and high quality relationship with your audience. That’s very important to the sense of community that often fuels social media relations across multiple platforms.

It’s an exciting thing to see happen, and every corporation can benefit from moving in this direction. Eventually community presence in national media and larger corporations will be looking for the experience many of us are gaining on a local level. There is only so much you can expect from marketing your company to consumers through traditional advertising. There is no direct relationship in advertising and marketing as we know it, and that world will dramatically change in the next few years.

Is there anything I haven’t touched on that you’re particularly interested in saying? (Like about the site, community, etc. anything.)

I love working with people who see the importance of the role the net will play in transforming the way the world gets and interacts with information. I also love working with veterans of news, and I will always remember the challenges they face with the changes that are happening. For some, that change is very difficult. But the fact is, we are no more in the television and newspaper business than Wal-Mart is in the trucking business. Our business is no longer the industry that surrounds distribution – the trucks, the printing press, the reams of paper, the broadcast towers, the satellite dishes, the lights, the huge cameras, the buildings, the “live trucks”… It’s the final product: information. The market in an on-demand world for news and information where people have to wait to receive a highly produced product is steadily shrinking. At the same time, the online audience for news and information is growing significantly. It’s an exciting time to be working in a new medium that is transforming the way we get information.