Heck, in smaller markets, the reporter shoots the whole thing in the field on his/her own AND comes back to the station to edit the story.
In my world on Today, it's a blend of Producer-led work and Editor-led work. Mostly, Producers set assignments and find material while Editors decide on the structure of the results and makes the piece. Then it must be approved. If changes are asked for, the editor does them and the finished work is submitted to Playback for air.
Dennis Degan, Video Editor-Consultant-Knowledge Bank
NBC Today Show
Sent from my iPhone 6 Plus
On May 27, 2016, at 6:57 PM, Oliver Peters oliverpeters@oliverpeters.com [Avid-L2] <Avid-L2@yahoogroups.com> wrote:
I think you are overthinking this and giving more credit to Avid systems than is due. Local market news packages as a rule simply don't use much collaboration. The exception would be if there's some sort of special show that's being produced. Even there it might be several editors each working on different segments on their own. Feature stories done during sweeps also get more attention. For day to day news, it's whatever can be turned around quickly in a few hours. Often in smaller markets, the videographer is also the editor, so speed and simplicity win the day. Shared storage or at least networking of some sort is important, but not project sharing.- OliverOliver Peters - editor | coloristNo it's not rocket science but the collaborative nature of how my shows work is crucial. Yes the basic cutting of news packages hasn't traditionally needed that but I figure that now that Avid's news systems and I assume others like Edius have enabled all kinds of collaboration that didn't use to exist back in the linear days news rooms technical infrastructure needs to support that. A system like Adobe where the roots are in standalone environments has yet to show its' chops in those environments from what I've heard. …...
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Posted by: Dennis Degan <dennyd1@verizon.net>
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