Spring 2016 Syllabus

CUNY Graduate School of Journalism  Jour 72311 Video Storytelling for the Web, 3 credits

Thursday 9.30 am-12.20 room 438 (CRN- 30756) a.k.a Team Tremendous

Friday 9.30 am-12.20 room 438 (CRN-30556) a.k.a Team Fantastic

INSTRUCTOR: Bob Sacha 

bio and examples of work  Best way to communicate is a DM on SLACK. (email: bob.sacha.journalism.cuny.edu), mobile 917.969.0201

Office Hours:available Thursday and Friday afternoon.  please sign up for a specific appointment. 

If you’re completely desperate, please text first, then send me a message on Slack and then call.please text my mobile 917.969.0201.  I’ll answer text or Slack direct messages before voicemail. I check my email once a week for this class so Slack first.

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You can think of this syllabus as a contract between us. Here are some very important parts:

We start class on time. If you’re not in your seat at 9.30 am, you’ll be marked late. Class participation is 20% of your grade.

If you’re not in class, in your seat and  present 10 minutes after we begin, you’ll be marked absent/ missed class. If you miss two classes without a written excuse or acceptable documentation, you will drop a full grade. 

If you miss three classes, you will fail this class. There are more details below in the ATTENDANCE section.

Please view this syllabus as a work in progress. Things can change but the assignments, exercises & deadlines will not change.***

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COURSE OBJECTIVES

This is a class firmly rooted in journalism.

Students will learn to research, report, shoot, and edit short, focused video stories designed specifically for the web. This class will build on the basic video concepts and skills taught in first semester interactive and broadcast craft classes — using video cameras and editing in Adobe Premiere Pro, shooting, transcribing and editing video for compelling visual journalism, telling successful stories through  strong characters, and basic interview skills — and move on to more advanced techniques in  these  areas.

Because web viewers demand highly engaging material, with a fast start, sharp focus, short narrative, and natural voices, students will focus on capturing stories with strong visuals and ambient audio of people personally affected by issues. We will focus on the concept of subjects telling their stories in their own voices, without heavy narration and without a reporter on camera.

Students will work in pairs at the beginning but work solo by the end, to prepare them for the major shift in journalism requiring one journalist to be highly skilled in many jobs. They will also learn how to market freelance pieces to meet the growing demand for professional-quality video for a  growing number of websites.

We’ll be using Canon c100 cameras to shoot HD video. You can also use a DSLR camera. Let’s be honest, no one cares which camera you use, it’s the quality of your work and the strength of your visual storytelling that really matters.

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COURSE OUTCOMES

At the end of this course, students will be able to:

  • Identify current and future trends in web video
  • Report and research topic to strengthen the video capture, edit and presentation
  • Find the voice of the story and understand story structure
  • Produce tightly focused video pieces with compelling narratives arcs
  • Write short summaries of their stories and provide web links to additional info
  • Write effective headlines and subheads following the 60/160 length of SEO
  • Effectively edit video stories using several forms of media
  • Create strong video stories of several styles
  • Write title cards that are concise and clear to help move a story forward without narration
  • Develop editorial judgment to critique their own work and the work of others in the industry for video storytelling
  • Instruct and supervise fellow journalists in choosing stories that can become effective video stories and guide them in the production of those stories for the web.
  • Freelance refined video pieces for the web.

 


Exercises and Assignments

For this  class you will produce 5 exercises  and 2 assignments, all will be done outside of class time.

THE EXERCISES:

Exercises are pass/fail. A pass will earn 10 points; extra points may be earned for creativity, points will be subtracted for lateness. Each exercise will be done alone.

Exercise 1; due week 2Document a location 

Document a location that will be seen in Assignment 1  and edit it in ten shots. NO interview. (important elements are shots that tell a story, sequence, good clean composition, focus, exposure, and proper white balance)— THINK OF THIS AS A SILENT FILM.

Exercise 2; due week 3 —Light and Mic two different subjects for interviews.

These two interviews should be  potential subjects for assignment ONE:  Both subjects must be done with artificial lighting using three different frames AND three different lighting setups. You can (and probably should) keep it simple but there needs to be three different types of artificial lighting in the final  piece, which should be less than 2 minutes. (important elements are  3 different types of artificial lighting, 3 different framings, clean audio)—

Exercise 3; due week 5—Create a  a Sight & Sound story in ten shots

This sight and sound piece should be related to Assignment 1 (important elements are composition, focus, exposure, white balance, strong ambient audio) and edit (you need to include at least one matched action, shots tell the story; NO interview example> https://vimeo.com/80971420#at=0

Exercise 4; due week 11— Create a Visual Poem with no interview

This visual poem should be related to Assignment 2 , told predominantly through visual storytelling. Can have ambient sounds of conversation. Here’s a lovely example. Another killer example. (important elements include good composition, lighting, clean audio, and original sound design and music, edit for pacing and rhythm. (pass/fail; a pass will earn 10 points; extra points may be earned for creativity)

Exercise 5; due week 14 — Create a short trailer (Vine, Instagram and or Facebook)

This trailer would be uploaded to various social media sites to promote your second assignment  Piece should be less than 15 seconds.Why would anyone ever click on this thing is the most important element.)

THE ASSIGNMENTS

Each assignment will consist of a short video (1-3 minutes)  suitable for web publishing.

The assignments will be graded. You will have one week to revise but you must send me an direct message (DM) on SLACK with a link to your revision. Late assignments will be automatically lowered a grade.

This is a class that values good research and smart reporting. Visual storytelling is also key in the form of capturing compelling scenes and sequences and “visual evidence” of your story. We want to capture “present tense” storytelling.

One of these projects must be done only with visual storytelling and with an “active” interview, that is, without a sit down, NO formal interview.

One of your two projects must use some still photography.

Assignment 1; due week 08—  A Person with an Odd Job.

  • This is a team project. (some of these would qualify. Maybe these jobs would also Oh yes, the New Yorker Magazine even writes about some of these.). You will share ALL assets  and each person must edit and submit their own original version .
  • One of these projects must be done only with visual storytelling and with an “active” interview, that is, without a sit down, NO formal interview.
  • One of your two projects must use some still photography.

Assignment 2; due week 14—  An Issue.

  • This is a solo project though you can have a second shooter.
  • One of these projects must be done only with visual storytelling and with an “active” interview, that is, without a sit down, NO formal interview.
  • One of your two projects must use some still photography.

Some notes on these exercises and assignments:

Do not be deceived into thinking that short visual journalism is easy. Think of how difficult it is to write a brilliant headline or the ideal tweet, or condense a 90 minute documentary perfectly into 2 minutes. That’s because these short messages are designed to stand out above the crowd, to cut through hundreds of visual messages each day and to say to someone ”click here and be wowed.”

Simple is hard.  It takes time and effort to make it good. That’s our goal.


FILM FESTIVALS

Also in class we’ll have five “film festivals.” Your participation is required. 

Everyone must submit a film, an inspiring short doc video you find on the internet. Submission should  not be longer than 8 minutes. Crazy clever is encouraged.

You will post the URL of your submission for the film festival to the class VSW page. Everyone must watch the videos and cast their vote for the strongest submission before 7 pm the day before class.

  • If you’re in class Tremendous, you must submit your link before Saturday at 7.00 pm,
    • vote before Wednesday, 7pm.
  • If you’re in class Fantastic, you must submit your link before Sunday at 7.00pm,
    • vote before Thursday 7.00pm.

Links to voting forms on Slack

We will start the class by watching the winning short film.  Submission should be no longer than 10 minutes. 

You cannot use a video that we have seen in class or that’s on my class notes or has been on the VSW blog. However, you are encouraged to find work that is compelling or experimental or different from the usual run-of-the-mill garbage we see online.


REQUIREMENTS FOR WRITTEN JOURNALISM & DELIVERY OF EACH PROJECT

Each final project must be posted on Vimeo before the class starts.  If I log on at the deadline and I can’t watch your video, for whatever reason, I’ll consider it a missed deadline and you’ll be automatically dropped a grade to start.

Each piece must be accompanied by the following EIGHT written journalistic elements which must be placed on Vimeo with the video. Vimeo has a 5,000 character limit  to accomplish all of these so use your words them wisely… remember , a tweet is 140 characters so 5,000 characters should be no problem.

1) – a 240 character description of the story. (For use in TubeMogel)

2) – a longer 250 word description of the story. Details like name, age, addresses are important here. This must contain a sentence about the newsiness of your story; or “why now?”

3) – a compelling headline and subhead that  are SEO optimized plus at least 5 tags

4) – a word for word accurate transcript of the final piece

5) – at least three suitable links to the subject, story or theme from other sources

6) –  audience engagement is crucial: on the vimeo page you’ll need to show links to two out of three: a tweet, facebook post and blog post/tumblr . You can create a short behind-the-scenes story about how you found the character, something interesting that happened that’s not in the final piece, why you created this story, etc . Try to engage your audience.

 7) – a custom poster frame that includes your title and your name. (this improves click ability)

8) – list Two potential outlets that might publish this video.

Your name MUST  be included in the title of the video you post on Vimeo.

Remember it takes time to upload your video and it takes time for Vimeo to process you video, depending on the time of day, the traffic at Vimeo and the speed of your connection. This process might take  several hours.


REQUIRED EQUIPMENT

You will need your own portable hardrive that is at least 500 gb (1TB recommended),  7200 rpm and at least firewire 400 or even better, firewire 800 or USB 3.0

You will also need your own digital media for the cameras. A 16 gb sdhc high speed card is a good start but it’ll will only capture 30 minutes at full HD (1920×1080) resolution. Be sure the speed of the card is at least  class 10.

We have a limited number of Canon C100 Cameras. This is very much like the real world so please plan accordingly. It  is not required that you use this camera (you can use a DSLR if you like.)

Here are some excellent tutorials on setting up the camera for shooting  Part One & Part Two, shooting with the c100, using the waveform monitor & gamma for good exposure, and video assist features


COACHES

Use them or we’ll lose them! Please make an appointment

Erin Lee Carr: Documentary Filmmaker, former VICE producer: erinleecarr@gmail.com

Kayle Hope, Visual and Multimedia Storytelling – Newsroom; Office Hours: Monday, Tuesday and Thursday 7:00 PM – 10:00 PM or by appointment. Email: kayle@kaylehope.com or kayle.schnell@journalism.cuny.edu

Bob Sacha, Video Storytelling and Multimedia – Cubicle 419L. Office Hours: by appointment.  bit.ly/bobsachaoffice

Emmanuel Alexandre (CUNY TV staff), Cameras/DSLR, Premiere/Video Editing, Lighting – Room 338.   Email: Emmanuel.Alexandre@journalism.cuny.edu

Sebastian Bednarski (CUNY TV staff), Cameras/DSLR, Premiere/Video Editing, Videography – Room 336.  email: Sebastian.bednarski@journalism.cuny.edu

Byron Hangey (CUNY TV staff), Cameras/DSLR, Premiere/Video Editing, Lighting, Videography – Room 340.    Email: Byron.hangey@journalism.cuny.edu

Setty McIntosh (CUNY TV staff), Premiere/Video Editing, Motion Graphics, Graphic Design, Videography – Room 342.    Email: setty.mcintosh@journalism.cuny.edu

Tim Whitney (CUNY TV staff), Motion Graphics, Photo Editing, Color Correction, Audio Editing/Recording – Room 334.   Email: tim.whitney@journalism.cuny.edu

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CLASSES week by week, Spring 2016

 

WK Thurs Friday Conversation Hands On in class DUE TODAY
1 2/4 1/29 syllabus, SLACK,story vs. report c100 Camera demo, shoot 10 shot sequence. choose doc Upload SEQ
2 2/11 2/5 Audio, Interview, lighting Light, shoot & Interview in class using c100:: Truths & Lie EX:Document Location, Post/vote FF1
3 2/18 2/9 (tues) Characters, 7 basic plots, Pitching, Editing Cutting yr doc in Premiere EX: LIte/Mic 2 IV subjects,Post/vote FF2
4 2/25 2/19 Visual Evidence, Matched Action 60 sec Pitch Everybody PItch + shotlist Post/voteFF3
5 3/3 2/26 Text & Context, Paper Edit, Transcription Writing Cards EX:Sight & Sound no IV,
6 3/10 3/4 Advanced Filming, Written Journalism Radio Cut Workshop Radio Cut w/transcript
7 3/17 3/11 Finishing: Color, Sound, Rough Cut Workshop Rough Cut Odd Job
8 3/24 3/18 One Man Band, Ethics/ Fair Use Create Poster Frame Odd Job FInal
9 3/31 3/23 (wed) Interviewing tricks 60 sec Pitch to Editor Pitch/shotlist, Post/vote FF4
10 4/7 4/1 Using Stills in video Radio Cut Workshop Radio Cut w/ transcript,
11 4/14 4/8 Issue Trap  Shoot SEQ in class w/c100 EX:Visual Poem, no IV
12 4/121 4/15 Stretching Web delivery SEQ w/ mobile, 3 scenes, Post/vote FF5
13 5/5 5/6 Mobile/ Tablet, Guests from VICE, NYT Rough Cut Workshop Issue Rough Cut
14 5/12 5/13 Language of Social Media Video demo apps Issue FInal,
15 5/19 5/20 Looking Forward, SOW surveys EX:Short trailer 4 social media

 

Since this is graduate school, I assume all of you are adults and I will strive to help you succeed in whatever way I can. However, there are two areas where this class will reflect the real world so the following two problems will  not be tolerated: missing or late assignments  and arriving late to class.

ONLINE RESOURCES

The History of Online Video ok, the last 5 years (or here)

National Film Board of Canada:
Capturing Reality, the Art of the Documentary
check out their amazing interactives too

Ira Glass on storytelling

#1 the basics

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=loxJ3FtCJJA

transcript http://public.youtranscript.com/zs/868.html

#2 finding great stories

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KW6x7lOIsPE&feature=channel

transcript:http://public.youtranscript.com/zs/869.html

#3 on good taste

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BI23U7U2aUY&feature=channel

transcript: http://public.youtranscript.com/zs/864.html

#4 on common pitfalls

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=baCJFAGEuJM&feature=channel

transcript: http://public.youtranscript.com/zs/870.html

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SUGGESTED READINGS: 

these are in our CUNY J School Library
In the Blink of An Eye, by Walter Murch
by the brilliant Oscar winning editor and sound designer, with great advice for all visual storytellers.[$8.43….ISBN-13: 978-1879505629]
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The Visual Story, Second Edition: Creating the Visual Structure of Film, TV and Digital Media 
Bruce Blockhas written the classic book that explains how to relate visuals to your story by understanding visual structure. If you’re lacking an education in visual storytelling, this book will bring you up to speed.[$22.95… ISBN-13: 978-0240807799]
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Writing for Story, Craft Secrets of Dramatic Non-Fiction    [$9.17….ISBN-13: 978-0452272958]
by Two-Time Pulitzer Price Winner  Jon Franklin. Best book ever for thinking about stories, characters and dramatic story structure in print, video, radio.  No high brow theory, just practical stuff. [$9.17….ISBN-13: 978-0452272958]
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DSLR Cinema, Crafting the Film Look with Video
by Kurt Lancaster. Geeky, tecky and right on the money. Uses all the same tools and work flows we do but explains them in depth. Also has excellent case study chapters.  [$24.86 …. ISBN-13: 978-0240815510]
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Telling True Stories, A Non Fiction Writers Guide
edited by Mark Kramer & Wendy Call, Nieman Foundation, Harvard
A huge well of great insight into non-fiction storytelling.  Just substitute  “video storyteller” everytime they use the word “writer. Probably 99% of what makes a great dramatic nonfiction print story  works in video.[$9.52 … ISBN-13: 978-0452287556]


DEADLINES

In the fast paced world of online journalism, deadlines seem to come constantly and repeatedly. They are also very serious business (check the first citation in Merriam Webster) So please regard them with awe and don’t even think of missing them. If you are late on a deadline, even by a minute, your grade will automatically be lowered by a half grade. Your grade  will drop a half grade for every day you are late.

Plan ahead. It almost always takes more time than you think to complete these assignments, so please don’t leave this to the last minute.  If you’re encountering difficulties reaching a source or finding information or shooting or editing come see me or contact me via a direct message on SLACK  at least 48 hours before the deadline.I can help guide you.

I want you to succeed but I will not tolerate last minute excuses.

 


ATTENDANCE 

Attendance is mandatory and unexcused absences will be reflected in your final grade.

Job interviews, work obligations, computer problems, routine medical appointments, meetings with advisers, transportation issues, and even scheduled source interviews are not valid reasons for missing class.These excuses, err, reasons will be considered an unexcused absence. Only a severe personal illness or family emergencies are valid reasons for missing a class—and you’ll need to provide a written excuse and documentation before I’ll consider them. I will only consider a written excuse from a doctor in the NYC  area that you have visited personally.

If you’re not in class , in your seat and  present 10 minutes after we begin, it will be recorded  as an absence/ missed class.

If you miss two classes without a written excuse or documentation, you will drop a full grade.

If you miss three classes, you will fail this class.

I will hold you to the same standard as your editor at the New York Times: that is, missing class for a wedding or because you feel crummy is not excusable in the real world and it won’t work in class either.

You might not value your grade in this class, but I talk with a lot of editors and commissioning editors. I promise that if they ask about you and you’ve been late or missed class, I’ll be totally honest with them.

 


PROFESSIONALISM

We’re all adults here so I feel silly saying this:

Please be on time.  A sign in sheet  will be passed around when  class begins.  If you have not signed in,  I will assume it was because you were not in class and you will be marked absent.

Please don’t take phone calls during class. It’s insulting and will not be tolerated.

Also, I suggest you don’t post to Facebook or Twitter or answer your email during class because those will be  the first things I remember when you ask me for a job recommendation or when your employer asks me about your work habits.

 


GRADING

I will grade each assignment on the 100-point scale:
A+     97.1-99.9        A future Online Journalism Award winner perhaps?
A       93.0-97.0        Publishable quality, with minor edits or questions.
A-      90.0-92.9        Nearly publishable, with just a few minor issues.
B+     87.1-89.9        Better than just good…w/ more work, it could possibly be published.
B       83.0-87.0        Good, solid work with several minor issues or a single major problem.
B-      80.0-82.9        Decent work with several bigger issues.
C+     77.1-79.9         Gaping holes in reporting and severe issues with the product
C       73.0-77            Poor
C-      70.0-72.9
F         0.0-69.9

Each Assignment will be graded:
50% storytelling,
30% Technical,
20% written materials

Final grade will be
80% assignments and exercises (each exercise 10%, each assignment 20%)
20% attendance, in-class participation

Revisions: You’ll have exactly 1 week from the day you receive the fine cut feedback to revise your fine cut. Your final grade will be the average grade of the fine cut and the revised cut. If you miss the fine cut deadline, you will also forfeit your chance to revise. YOU MUST SEND ME A DIRECT MESSAGE ON SLACK  WHEN YOU POST YOUR REVISION otherwise I won’t know you’ve revised.

this is the worksheet I use when I’m grading your pieces


DIVERSITY

Please consider how you might include topics of diversity in your reporting and visual storytelling.

Consider covering diverse and under-reported  communities.

Look for stories that are out of the mainstream press, particularly  those about black people, Asians, Latinos, Native Americans, white women, the LGBT community, and poor people of all races. Strive to show them in their “ordinariness” by including them in stories other than those about  race, class, gender, sexuality and social pathology. Use them as meaningful sources, as your “experts.”

Strive to tell stories that are free of euphemisms and stereotypes.

 


 PLAGIARISM & ACADEMIC DISHONESTY

All work in this class must be your own.

Plagiarism is the use of another’s ideas or words, video or recordings or ideas without properly and clearly acknowledging the source of the information.

Using other people’s work,  video, audio, music, text  or ideas without attribution and their written permission will result in an F for the assignment or potential dismissal from the course depending on the severity of the infraction.

Other forms of academic dishonesty include:

  • Unauthorized collaboration.
  • Fabrication of information, quotes or sources.
  • Impeding the work of others.


If you are still unsure whether you’re about to cross over to the dark side, PLEASE COME SEE ME. Again, I want you to succeed and academic dishonesty is the worst kind of failure.

If you have any other questions, please check the student handbook or code of ethics or ask me.

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