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Charlie Beckett

October 21st, 2013

New research project: Live blogging – is it any good and what next?

2 comments

Estimated reading time: 5 minutes

Charlie Beckett

October 21st, 2013

New research project: Live blogging – is it any good and what next?

2 comments

Estimated reading time: 5 minutes

Live blogging is one of those formats that have emerged in the last few years as Web 2.0 journalism has gone interactive, continuous and connected. But what impact is live blogging having on the newsroom and do they actually work? Do they create better journalism and do they attract audiences who pay attention? Polis has already done research on this, and now Swedish journalist Karin O’Mahony is at Polis for a month to research this topic and she would love to hear you views – you’re welcome to attend a seminar she’s holding, too, details below.

You can live blog anything that moves...
You can live blog anything that moves…

By Karin O’Mahony

Will live blogs change the way web journalism is produced? This is an interesting question that emerged during one of my interviews for a research project about live blogs that I’m currently doing here at Polis. But that’s not how it started – my interest in the subject of live blogging emerged more specifically from the informal tone in which live blogs are usually written. As you know, they often start with a simple “Good morning” or such and are usually, to some extent, carried on in a similar way throughout.

Perhaps this feeling of being part of an informal conversation rather than lectured by a superior is part of the explanation to why live blogs are popular among readers. As shown by Thurman/Walters (2012) in a case study  of the Guardian’s live blogs, they tend to attract more readers than other articles our picture galleries on the same subject. (This is one of the very few studies I’ve found on the subject – should anyone know of anything else, don’t hesitate to email me mailto:O’Mahony.k@lse.ac.uk .)

I have been at LSE for one week (of four) and have done several interviews with journalists at the Guardian and Swedish newspaper Aftonbladet. Someone compared live blogs to broadcasting, but in text rather than audio or video. Certainly they do differ from regular news articles in many ways. They might resemble Twitter updates in their use of short time-stamped snippets of information, and it’s certainly not uncommon that Twitter updates are used in the blog by aggregation.

Also of interest is the way readers are or are not involved in a live blog, with comments “above the line” rather than under it. Their contributions may be welcome, and part of the informal, even “lovely”, conversation going on, as another interviewee put it. I find there are indications that live blogging is a way of tying tighter knots with readers, shaping a sense of loyalty towards the newspaper website as a place to dwell for a longer period of time – and thus perhaps generating more revenues.

Other aspects are verifying of sources in real time and live blogs vs the social media – which brings us back to the future of live blogging. Recently, some news agencies have looked into the format and are launching live blog services to be used by their clients. How this is going to affect the format is yet to be found out. It should be noted that news agencies are well used to report in real time – but can they mange the more informal tone and other aspects of the live blog?

Any other aspects of the live blog that you think I’ve missed out on? Do not hesitate to contact me at k.O’Mahony@lse.ac.uk.

Here are details of the research seminar:

Room 114, first floor, New Academic Building, 6pm, Thursday 31 October.
 
This research seminar will explore how the format of live blogs affects journalism. News websites live blogs could be compared to live broadcasting, but in text rather than audio and video. Live blogs, here studied at the Guardian and Aftonbladet, differ from regular news articles in many ways. They resemble Twitter updates in their use of short time-stamped snippets of information, and may sometimes fuse news reporting with humour, analysis and commentary. Readers may be welcome to contribute to a live blog, more so one from a football match rather than an ongoing riot, for instance. Other aspects are sourcing and verifying of sources in real time, live blogs vs the social media and the future of live blogging. Will live blogs replace news websites, as one interviewed journalist suggests, and in that way perhaps reshape the way web journalism is produced altogether? Or is the format merely a way of tying tighter knots with readers and thus form a loyalty with the websites visitors?
Karin O’Mahony is a Polis fellow currently working on the project in LSE from mid-October to mid-November. She’s a news online editor for Swedish newspaper Svenska Dagbladet and based in Stockholm.

Karin’s stay at Polis is funded by the Swedish Journalistfonden

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Charlie Beckett

Posted In: Journalism | Media | Research

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