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E-Media Tidbits

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Steve Outing
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Posted by Steve Outing 12:02 PM February 16, 2006
'Temporary' Podcasts
A podcast is generally thought of as a regular audio feature -- daily, once a week, whatever ... but the idea is that it's sort of an online radio show that continues long term. But podcasts (just like blogs) don't have to be perpetual. News publishers might want to think in terms of the "temporary podcast."

One example comes from the Greensboro (North Carolina) News & Record, where religion reporter Nancy McLaughlin wrote a story about a young woman who gave her kidney to an older woman who had been in need of one for 13 years. (The women were strangers, and the younger woman did it because she said God called her to do it.) Both women kept journals documenting their experiences.

As part of the N&R's online reporting of the story, the website staff produced short (1- to-5-minute) podcasts of the women reading from their journals, leading up to their surgeries. News technology analyst Herb Everett has been producing the podcasts, and he says that the website will continue to produce updates until the one-year anniversary of the December 1, 2005, surgery.

This temporary-podcast concept has many possible implementations. To toss out some examples, apply it to major news events. A reporter covering a major trial could produce a daily podcast for the length of the proceedings. Or a correspondent dispatched to cover a hurricane could do a week's worth of podcasts.

Podcast listening software generally makes it easy for a listener to unsubscribe from a podcast, so there's no reason to limit podcasting to permanent audio features.
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