10 Golden Rules for Video Journalists
At yesterday’s “Creating Video Narratives” workshop at Beyond Bootcamp, Washington Post video journalist Travis Fox shared his 10 guidelines for making video reports.
- Golden Rule 10: Get “X-roll.” X-roll is when you get your interviewee’s money quotes in their natural environment.
- Golden Rule 9: Shoot within 180 degrees around a subject. In other words, don’t walk around your subject when interviewing them.
- Golden Rule 8: Sequence your video with a variety of detail, tight, medium, wide shots as well as cut away shots. 50 percent of shots will be tight, 25 percent medium and 25 percent wide
- Golden Rule 7: Remember 80:20 ratio (80 percent should be b-roll and 20 percent should be interviews)
- Golden Rule 6 Get close to the subject when interviewing them for audio purposes
- Golden Rule 5: Stay quiet when shooting
- Golden Rule 4: If you do not get the shot, you do not have it.
- Golden Rule 3: Do not move the camera when shooting (unless you are an advanced videographer)
- Golden Rule 2: Hold every shot for 10 seconds
- Golden Rule 1: Wear headphones
Thanks to University of Miami multimedia graduate student Walyce Almeida for letting me share these with you.
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January 10, 2009 | Filed Under General Journalism
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10 Golden Rules for Video Journalists : Ricochet by Chrys Wu http://tinyurl.com/7fna5k
10 Golden Rules for Video Journalists http://is.gd/hXST
Great reminders! Thanks for posting this list. I know this stuff from years of producing content for TV, but for some reason now that I am a vlogger, I forget some of it. In any case even video blogging should have a mix of fun and professional quality. So thanks for sharing some ways to improve my game!