Eric’s blog

“Chaos Storytelling”

During a recent project for factual television producers, one of the participants asked if there was any way to “break out” of the same old beginning/middle/end – character/conflict/resolution story structure that has held away for producers and their audiences since Aristotle first articulated it all those years ago. He wanted to know if there is something he called “chaos storytelling” – a way to tell stories for television which don’t always have the rigid character/conflict structure and a neat and complete ending.

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Showing what’s at stake can show the path to change

A critical function of leadership is successfully moving organizations toward change, especially in times of crisis and volatility. But what are the key components of that narrative? How do leaders “frame” what’s at stake effectively? How do they explain what is to be gained from the change and even more importantly, explain how to get there?

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Why not give the news audience everything it wants?

There are two different, mutually exclusive approaches to television journalism – giving the viewers what they need or giving them what they want. Giving them more of what they want is perhaps the greatest change in television journalism in the past 25 years. The people who came to TV news in the sixties and seventies came out of the newspaper business. They understood the necessity of selling papers, but their first loyalty was to journalism. That means, they had strong views on what was, and wasn’t news. They were the ones who decided what was newsworthy and what wasn’t.

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Why “knowing what the news is” isn’t everything

Do you know what the news is? If you are a journalist doing your job, you’re trying to find out everything you can about the big stories of the day – climate change, the pandemic, poverty, crime, terrorism, corporate corruption, pollution, stress, violence, the family, education, the ups and downs to the stock market, and so on.

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The Magic Lantern and the iPhone

A visit to the ancient city of Girona, Spain resulted in an unexpected, amazing experience. After the all-important cafe’ cortado in the plaza in the shadow of the gothic Cathedral of St Mary, I wandered down the hill through the old town, crossed the river on one of the many footbridges and walked into what turned out to be one of the most moving, even emotional experiences of my life. The Museu del Cinema in Girona has the world’s foremost collection of the evolution of the technology that led to what we call the cinema – who knew???

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How online content creators fit into the factual TV market

TV networks and stations with national or regional audiences for their news and factual programming seem like ripe targets for online content creators. There is a dynamic market demand among broadcast news organizations (both public service broadcasters and private stations, television and radio) for online content. And while all have their own in-house “digital team” putting out content on social media and their websites, those internal teams may or may not be delivering the results the station needs. That’s where outside production teams specializing in creating compelling online content come in.

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“Surviving Office Politics”

The first rule of office politics is also the simplest: stay out. In business, you’ve got to survive to succeed. If you play politics, eventually you will end up on the wrong side. Unfortunately, office politics is a fact of life, and it will affect any good businessperson from time to time. Even if you don’t play politics (always the best way), other people do.

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