broadcast journalism training

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INTERNATIONAL BROADCAST JOURNALISM TRAINING | Tuire Nuolivirta, 1.4.2015 INTERNATIONAL BROADCAST JOURNALISM TRAINING 1986 - 1995 Tuire Nuolivirta, Head of Training, the Finnish Broadcasting Company, Yle, Radio and Television Institute SUMMARY 1

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Page 1: BROADCAST JOURNALISM TRAINING

INTERNATIONAL BROADCAST JOURNALISM TRAINING | Tuire Nuolivirta, 1.4.2015

INTERNATIONAL BROADCAST JOURNALISM TRAINING 1986 - 1995

Tuire Nuolivirta, Head of Training, the Finnish Broadcasting Company, Yle, Radio and Television Institute

SUMMARY

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INTERNATIONAL BROADCAST JOURNALISM TRAINING | Tuire Nuolivirta, 1.4.2015

In Yle´s Radio and Television Institute, which trained the company´s personnel, an extensive international training programme entitled “Broadcast Journalism” was built up in 1986.

The programme intended to develop the journalist skills in situations where international events had the focus of attention. Co-operation partners included the BBC/Great Britain, ARD/Germany, Scandinavian Broadcasting Companies, NPR (National Public Radio)/USA, CNN/USA and some of the most respected centres of expertise in the field, such as University of Cologne/Germany, CFPJ/Centre de Perfectionnement des Journalists/France, Institute of Communication Studies/University of Leeds/Great Britain and European Journalism Centre/the Netherlands. The programme required also intense co-operative arrangements with Yle News and Current Affairs Programmes. Longer attachments and strategic Training and Development Projects were also carried out at a Corporate and Programme Department levels.

Broadcast Journalism Training involved going through the journalistic process bit-by-bit, the starting point being themes suggested by Yle´s programme departments. The result was always a programme or an interview which was then analysed in depth.

”Broadcast Journalism” Training developed skills in interviewing, package making, conducting discussion programmes, researching, on camera presenting, filming and visual thinking and focused on journalistic and technical points applicable to television and radio. Training was advanced, practical and experimental and offered a combination of professional training and programme production. Best of the programmes and news items made at the workshops during the training were transmitted on Yle’s Radio and Television channels. Nearly 400 Yle journalists participated at least one five day workshop.

The on-going aim of the training programme was to develop quality journalism, to help Yle retain its position as the best broadcaster in Finland, and to strive to meet the expectations of existing audiences as well as reaching out to new ones. Training was unique, Yle was the only broadcasting company in the world who arranged this type of training. in foreign languages,

INTERVIEWING TECHNIQUES Yle is a Public Broadcasting Radio and Television Company in which the ability to make interviews in foreign languages played and still plays an important part in the daily news gathering activities. The aim of the training was to achieve high standards in the international style of interviewing in which the inter-cultural elements of communication play a vital role. Training was carried out in English, German, French and Swedish.

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INTERNATIONAL BROADCAST JOURNALISM TRAINING | Tuire Nuolivirta, 1.4.2015

MethodAt that time live TV and radio interviews were bound to play a greater part in Yle´s daily news routines. That is the reason why most of the interviews conducted by the workshop participants were live from the RTI studio, interviews such as News Bulletins, Five-Minute Interviews, Two-Handed Interviews, Studio Phone-Ins and Telephone Interviews. If necessary, the Beta crew was also sent to work on location.

Interview Topics and IntervieweesThe aims were pitched at a high level by paying attention to the current, advanced international nature of the subject matters in news and current affairs, among others the Gulf War, the Gandhi assassination, the Fall of the Berlin Wall, German reunification, the disintegration of the Soviet Union, the break-up of Yugoslavia, efforts to make piece in the Middle East, the metamorphosis of the South African government, Haiti and Chinese orphanages.

24-26 interviewees of high caliber, who all encompassed a wide variety of experience and expertise, were invited for each workshop. An example of a high caliber interviewee was Desmond Tutu, a South African Anglican cleric who is known for his role in the opposition to apartheid in South Africa, interviewed by telephone.

AnalysisThe Interviews were analyzed in detail and constructive criticism was the key issue. The interview´s story line, introduction, questions and pay off were carefully scrutinized. A spotlight was turned on each journalist´s communication skills and in terms of the interviews made in the studio environment, interviewees´ comments were taken into account.

Satellite Interviews - making advantage of modern communication technologySatellite interviews, also called Down-the-line interviews, whereby the foreign experts sitting in a studio abroad, join the journalist in the home studio on a screen via satellite had become ever increasing features of the news room routines also in Yle, due to the current speed of communication and reasonable costs involved.

From the journalist´s point of view satellite interviews were at that time most challenging. The question was how to find the right avenue, to conduct the interview in a focused and professional way. Furthermore, the distance between the interviewer and interviewee, as well as the lack of eye contact, created problems. Technical, visual and sound shortcomings could also put journalists´ skills and flexibility at a premium. Consequently the journalists must always keep everything under control. That is why Broadcast Journalism Training adopted satellite interviews as a part of the English interview training

Live Satellite Interviews, practical arrangementsLive satellite interviews to London, by far the most difficult exercises of the workshop, were organized in co-operation with Yle, Telecom Finland and British Telecom. Two hours of satellite time were booked for each workshop. The British Telecom studio was available for the interviewees joining us from London. Yle covered the costs of the satellite transmissions and the London studio. Broadcast Journalism Training selected the interviewees and invited them to the studio according to a fixed schedule. Telecom Finland and British Telecom were responsible for

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INTERNATIONAL BROADCAST JOURNALISM TRAINING | Tuire Nuolivirta, 1.4.2015

the technical arrangements in co-operation with the technical experts from Yle Transmission Center.

Examples of Live Satellite IntervieweesAll the interviewees chosen by Broadcast Journalism Training represented a very high standard of expertise. As an example a couple of interviewees who joined the workshops by satellite in London:

1. A Russian Colonel , a former Soviet master spy and double agent, who was in the First Chief Directorate of the KGB, and who spied for Britain for eleven years while working undercover as a diplomat in Denmark. He was betrayed to Britain in 1985. At that the time workshop was held he was under sentence of death. His father was a colonel in the NKVD, Stalin´s secret police and his brother was also a KGB agent. The interviewee had kept abreast of affairs in the CIS and could speak about them authoritatively.

2. A Croat from Zagreb, who was the editor of “World Today Magazine”, published by the Royal Institute of International Affairs at Chatham House. He was also the author of the book “On the Balkans” and East European Correspondent of “the Economist” and the former producer in the BBC Yugoslavian Service at the Bush House in London. The topic covered with him was Current Developments in the former Yugoslavia.

JudgementFrom the training point of view satellite interview exercises proved to be most successful. The workshop participants made remarkable progress in their ways of interviewing in English. That is something to be appreciated taking into consideration that live satellite interviews can be substantial test even for many on screen, native speaker journalists.

Satellite links also made good economic senseJudging by the results of the satellite interviews, Broadcast Journalism Training continued this form of exercises. The goal was to give Yle News and Current Affairs journalists greater experience an enhanced perspective in dealing with international news and current affairs subjects in an appropriate and skillful journalistic manner. It was realized.

BROADCAST JOURNALISM - STRATEGIC DEVELOPMENT AND TRAINING PROJECTS ”RTI Euro” 1995A yearlong project at Yle Corporate level, designed and conducted by Broadcast Journalism Training in co-operation with British media professionals.

Finnish Membership of the European Union set the tone for the project, which was financed by the company and the EU.

”RTI Euro” was designed for Yle journalists working in News, Current Affairs and Factual/Documentary Programmes, with the direct intention of furthering production of high quality radio and television programmes relating to EU for the benefit of the Finnish audience.

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INTERNATIONAL BROADCAST JOURNALISM TRAINING | Tuire Nuolivirta, 1.4.2015

”RTI Euro” emphasised understanding of the Union’s character and following up the matters of central importance from Finland’s perspective. In practise, training was combined with programme-making. It involved journalistic work, problem-solving, process training and on-site work. The training was completed with a ”Let’s Face Europe” programme making trip to Brussels.

The whole project contributed to a wider understanding of the European Union and consideration of its future developments. 46 radio and television journalists and 20 members of production team participated the training. The project resulted in more than 20 television and radio programmes and other relevant materials keyed to current Euro issues for programmes, which were transmitted on Yle’s radio and television channels during the year 1995.

”Radio News Report” 1996A three-month long development project for Yle´s Radio News Department, designed and conducted by Broadcast Journalism Training.

The aim of the project was to help the Yle Afternoon Prime Time News, entitled ”Uutisraportti” (“News Report”), to make the news broadcasts as compact, dynamic and interesting as possible for the benefit of the audience, and to fully utilise the characteristics of the medium. It was carried out in co-operation with YLE’s own foreign correspondents as well as with British, French and American professionals. It included workshops on today’s challenging newscasts and a two-week, organised study trip to France and the United States under the title ”Making Quality News”.

An evaluation report is available in Finnish.

Yle’s Breakfast Programme ”Ykkösen Aamu-TV” 1996 - 1997 A three month long development and training project for TV1’s News and Current Affairs Programmes.

The project helped launch Yle’s new breakfast programme, which started on March 3, 1997. The main tasks of the project were to design a relevant on camera test for applicants interested in presenting the new programme, to develop a presenting style to fit the requirements assigned by the management, to train the presenters in presenting, conducting interviews and studio discussions as well as to assist ”Aamu-TV” regarding directing, TV grammar and the general visual impact of the programme. The project was also involved in making of seven pilot programmes.

The project was carried out in co-operation with British and American professionals.

”Ajankohtainen Kakkonen” 1997

A two-stage training and development project for TV2’s Current Affairs Magazine Program, entitled ”Ajankohtainen Kakkonen”.

The project focused on supplementary ways of working to make ”Ajankohtainen Kakkonen” better meet the requirements set for the weekly television current affairs programme with regard to structuring and producing, package making, shooting, editing, use of music, set designing, use of graphics, etc.

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INTERNATIONAL BROADCAST JOURNALISM TRAINING | Tuire Nuolivirta, 1.4.2015

The project decided to find the answers through professional discussions, to generate new ideas and new ways of thinking through programme analysis, lectures and demonstrations. Specific involvement in a planning and development process of one of the weekly programmes was combined with working on-site with a British Producer/Instructor and a British film crew.

The project continued autumn 1997 with the intention of further developing presentation styles, as well as improving the overall visual impact of the programme.

Further information

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