Wednesday, March 23, 2011

ABC 22, Fox 44 add staff, 5 am, 11 pm news shows

Fox 44 & ABC 22 continue local news expansion
Will produce 6 hours of local news daily
 
 
Beginning Monday, March 28, ABC 22 will add 90-minutes of local news to its programming line-up.
 
Viewers in the Burlington/Plattsburgh market will then be able to get local news starting an hour earlier at 5 am on ABC 22. The newscast will be anchored by Jackie Morlock, who recently joined the news team, and meteorologist Kerrin Jeromin.
 
In addition, ABC 22 will program an 11 pm news Monday through Sunday. The newscast will be anchored weeknights by Greg Navarro, meteorologist Nick Johnston and sportscaster Kristian Read. Lauren Maloney will continue anchoring ABC 22 News at 7 pm.
 
In December 2007, Fox 44 launched a 10 pm newscast to become the third local television outlet providing coverage to viewers in the market. In March 2008, a 7 pm newscast debuted on ABC 22. Since then, the 10 pm news has been expanded to one-hour. In the summer of 2008, morning news was added to both channels.
 
Once the change takes place Fox 44 & ABC 22 will have expanded to six hours of local news daily in just 3 ½ years.
 
Fox 44 is owned by Smith Media, LLC and manages ABC 22.
 
- source: Vic Vetters, for ABC 22

Friday, March 11, 2011

Press secretary for Gov. Peter Shumlin describes new video, social media initiatives

At the request of vermontpressconnections, Bianca Slota submitted the following explanation of how, as press secretary for Governor Peter Shumlin, she is using social media and video. As a former WCAX reporter, we new she knew video; but she's obviously up on Twitter, etc. too.
* * * * * * *
In the increasingly diverse and fast-paced world of online communication one thing is certain: you either learn how to use it or you get left behind. Here in the Office of Governor Peter Shumlin we are embracing this new media world and using it to make sure no one gets left behind.
While my official title is Press Secretary, I see myself as more of a social media director. Or maybe new media director. I help Governor Shumlin maintain a presence on Twitter (@VTGovernor), Facebook (http://www.facebook.com/pages/Vermont-Governor/155136287867671), YouTube (www.youtube.com/VTGovernor), and in the blogosphere on the governor’s official web site: www.governor.vermont.gov.
One of our communications priorities coming into office was using video to keep the Governor in contact with Vermonters and vice versa.  I am quite proud of what we have done. The most exciting development is our Ask the Governor feature on the governor’s official web site. We invite people to submit their questions to Governor Shumlin through a standard web form. About once a week we go through the questions and select a few that the governor can answer through a brief video response. Submissions range from questions about our single-payer healthcare reform effort, to questions about tax policy, and sometimes questions about personal experiences with a particular department of government. Our selection process is pretty simple – we try to pick out questions that can be easily answered in a few minutes and that might be of interest to the state as a whole, or to a particular group of people. The governor generally answers two or three questions at once, and I edit together the clip before posting it to YouTube and to our site.
I think Ask the Governor is a fantastic way for Vermonters to be in touch with their Chief Executive. While we do not have time to respond to all the questions through video, every question does get answered by the Governor’s Information and Referral Office.
In addition to the Ask the Governor section, we have a video page that includes all the footage from Governor Shumlin’s weekly press conferences. Sometimes we post a video with the governor’s thoughts on a particular subject, like this one that we taped the day after a fundraiser for Pete’s Greens: http://governor.vermont.gov/video-petes-greens-fundraiser. In the near future you will also be able to watch videos about some of the governor’s priorities or a video about what some of our agencies and departments are up to.
We also have a great online photo gallery filled with hundreds of pictures. You can check out the places Governor Shumlin has visited, the people he has met, and see what the great companies and people in this state are up to. Who knows, you might even see yourself or someone you know in one of photos.
What all of this boils down to is access. Vermont has always been a place where ordinary citizens can reach their elected officials with ease. As online communication becomes a bigger part of the way you communicate with the world, we want to make sure it is a bigger and easier part of the way you communicate with us and how we communicate with you.
-Bianca Slota

Tuesday, March 8, 2011

How DOES a reporter address an acting governor?

On the March 7 WCAX evening news, Lt. Gov. Phil Scott was interviewed live about the March Blizzard by WCAX evening anchor Darren Parron. LG Scott was acting governor while Gov. Peter Shumlin was on vacation, and Parren wanted to know how the State had responded to the day's record blizzard. After announcing he would interview acting governor and lieutenant governor Phil Scott, Parren addressed him directly as "Mr. Scott."

Now, Lieutenant Gov. Scott, a racecar driver and professional contractor, is certainly handier with tools than the average pol, but he's no Montgomery Scott, chief engineer of the Starship Enterprise and the only other Public Figure (real or fictitious) I know of with the honorific of "Mr. Scott." What, exactly, SHOULD a reporter call a lieutenant governor who is acting governor?

According to the Washington School of Protocol website, here is the proper form: "Don’t directly address an Acting Governor as "Governor (name)". The rule is "address by rank, identify by office" -- so address as "Senator (name)" and identify as the Acting Governor.

So according WSP, Parren should have addressed Acting Governor Scott as Lieutenant Governor Scott. And now back to the real world - if the search engines have to do much of this, they'll blow apart.

Monday, March 7, 2011

NESN Red Sox announcer got his start in St. Michael's College journalism program

My son Joe has expressed an interest in attending St. Michael's College next year. Not surprisingly we receive lots of recruiting material from the liberal arts school in Colchester. So far the most interesting piece has come from New England Sports Network (NESN) Red Sox pregame and postgame host Tom Caron, though.

According to the one-page flyer, TC is a 1986 SMC grad. He majored in journalism, did his first sports play-by-play, interned for WPTZ, and edited the campus newspaper, The Defender. He reports that "I spent hours in class and after class discussion media ethics (when I wasn't debating the value of the Designated Hitter)....for me, choosing Saint Michael's proved to be a home run." He promises to discuss his days at SMC during upcoming shows this summer.

TC isn't the only bigtime baseball announcer with Vermont roots. Tom Cheek, the longtime voice of the Toronto Blue Jays, was the sports director for WJOY in the early 1970's. He was preceded by Bob Lobel, a longtime fixture in the Boston TV market. And finally, the late, great Ken Coleman, the longtime voice of the Red Sox, got his start at a Rutland radio station. Someone once asked him for advice on getting started. He hearkened back to his Rutland days and said, "be willing to do anything and everything. Sweep the floors, everything." That's good advice for anyone trying to break into the media.

Essex Reporter co-founder wins South Carolina Press Association awards

Essex Reporter co-founder Tim Callahan won four 2010 South Carolina Press Assocation awards, including two first place honors.

Callahan started his third community newspaper, The Murrells Inlet Messenger, last year and earned instant recognition from his peers, capturing first place among associate/individual members in the best editorial/opinion category for a column on his younger brother's funeral.

He swept the best feature writing category, winning first second and third place.

As a general assignment reporter for the Coastal Observer, Callahan won SCPA awards in 2006 and 2007 for beat reporting - courts and education - and sports and news writing. He spent 2008 and 2009 finishing a novel and freelancing 121 articles for a local paper.

Callahan also attended Denver Seminary and earned a master's degree in journalism from Regent University in 2001. He was a Washington, D.C., correspondent for Christianity Today from 2002-2004. In the 90's, he earned statewide press awards in Pennsylvania, where he met his wife of 13 years, Debbie. They live in Pawleys Island, S.C., and are active members of Grace Church Waccamaw, where they are starting a Celebrate Recovery ministry.

"Without the Lord and recovery, I would have been dead 25 years ago," Callahan said.

"I am a Vermonter at heart," Callahan said. "I read Vermont Press Connections without fail. I have known Guy Page for 30 years and he is a good friend and fellow publisher, who learned a trick or two from Kit Wright and myself after we started the Essex Reporter [in 1981, after Suburban List folded]. In turn, Kit and I were taught the basics by The Other Paper. "Guy stayed with the Cochester and North Avenue papers a lot longer than I did with the papers I founded," Callahan said. "I am now learning from him. And I am glad he is doing Vermont Press Connections and keeping me informed. It's needed. The Vermont Press Association has to be the only one in the country without a web site."

Sunday, March 6, 2011

vermontpressconnections is back; Digger gets new digs