[BC] reprinted by permission TV week Trial By Fire: Station Web Site Coverage

dean tiernan dtiernan at gmail.com
Mon Oct 29 16:30:36 CDT 2007



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October 28, 2007
Trial By Fire: Station Web Site Coverage Comes of Age

By Daisy Whitney

The fires that ravaged Southern California last week were one of the 
first major local news stories to demonstrate there’s widespread 
consumer interest in watching local news online.

Most of the local broadcasters in Los Angeles and San Diego augmented 
their expanded on-air coverage with beefed-up Web coverage that included 
live streaming video of their newscasts as well as ancillary local video 
feeds. The spikes in traffic underscore the shift in news consumption 
patterns: Viewers clearly are interested in watching news video on their 
computers.

For instance, NBC-owned KNBC-TV in Los Angeles ran three separate live 
streams online and generated about 135,000 views on its Web site on 
Tuesday, Oct. 23, an exponential increase from the usual 8,000 a day. 
Total page views for the site jumped to close to 4 million on Oct. 22, 
an eightfold increase from the norm, said Craig Robinson, executive VP 
of operations and digital strategy for the station.

"We have access to all this information and now we have the technology 
to offer it to our users," he said.

CBS-owned stations KCAL-TV and KCBS-TV in Los Angeles also saw big jumps 
in traffic. KCAL airs all news during prime time, so clearly local 
viewers are in the habit of tuning to it when the networks are airing 
entertainment programming. Total page views for the KCBS site—which the 
KCAL site feeds into—from Sunday evening through Wednesday afternoon hit 
5 million, a 600 percent rise from the prior week. Meanwhile, the site 
served up 1.2 million video streams, a 1,400 percent increase from the 
same period the prior week.

In fact, nearly every CBS station in the network-owned group generated 
increases in video views, ranging from 72 percent to more than 600 
percent, in the early days of the fires.

KCBS actually broke the story online on Sunday morning. "We weren’t on 
TV then, and with the Web site we can go directly on," said Jason Ball, 
senior executive producer for news at KCBS and KCAL. The stations 
streamed the video feed from their helicopter online and then broadcast 
a second feed on the site when the anchors arrived at the station, he 
said. The Web coverage also included interactive maps, viewer photos and 
additional information on the fires.

"The Web staff has been working 24/7. There are now hundreds of 
on-demand clips from the fires," said Lane Beauchamp, managing editor 
for the CBS Television Stations digital media group.

McGraw Hill-owned ABC affiliate KGTV in San Diego also augmented its 
extended on-air coverage with live Web streaming. "We do try to stream 
breaking news whenever we are in sustained breaking-news coverage," said 
Gary Brown, news director for the station. He declined to provide Web 
streaming figures, but did say traffic rose on Tuesday to 3 million page 
views, above the average daily traffic of less than 1 million.

Internet streaming is not the only new-media extension on which stations 
relied. NBC-owned KNSD-TV in San Diego introduced cell phone text alerts 
for the first time during coverage of the fires. By Wednesday, more than 
10,500 viewers had signed up for the alerts, said Phyllis Schwartz, 
executive VP for news, promotion and original content for the NBC TV 
station group and acting general manager for KNSD.

KNSD also streamed live coverage, generating more than 325,000 views on 
Monday, compared to a few thousand on an average day. The station also 
logged as high as 7 million page views on Tuesday, up from the norm of 
about 250,000. "It is the biggest test so far for Internet steaming," 
she said.

Related Story:
# Local Stations Bring Wildfire Story Home
Tags:
Print Edition, Web Video
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