The large loft space at 720 Bathurst Street in
downtown Toronto easily swallows the equipment and facilities for
The Real News Network’s (TRNN) more than two-and-a-half
dozen employees. A three-camera studio set-up is tucked away in a
far corner opposite the newsroom. The black shades are drawn to
eliminate the sun’s glare on the handful of computer
screens. Creaks emanate from the ceiling, the result of footsteps
one floor above, and seem louder than they really are.
That’s because network staff are quietly perched in
front of computer screens, headsets over their ears in most
cases. They're reviewing footage fromwire services, capturing
clips sent from a reporter in Washington, D.C. and gathering
research for their latest stories on the U.S. election primaries.
Ultimately, TRNN hopes to post these and other
stories and then retu rn to them again and again, offering debate
about the issue at hand and comparisons of how other news outlets
have covered the same story.
Early last year,
when the Review’s Shereen Dindar
covered Independent World Television (IWT) readying its news
network for launch (“Heard the Independent
News?”), CEO and senior editor Paul Jay spoke
of providing audiences with in-depth, contextualized stories that
would transcend most television news. One year later, the
non-profit network runs news programming online as promised, but
its television programming remains in the start-up
phase.
IWT renamed its video journalism
project The Real News Network in 2006, promising to deliver to
the world important stories unfettered by commercial
interests—no corporate funding, no government subsidies
and no advertisements. TRNN called itself the
“world’s first truly independent, non-profit,
viewer-supported daily video news and documentary
service,” transparently divulging sources to its
audience as well as its assumptions about a story.TRNN also
wanted to avoid pretending its reporters were unbiased.
“To be human is to have bias,” states the
“What’s real about the Real News?”
segment at therealnews.com. Transparency,
they hoped, would ensure objectivity in spite of acknowledged
biases.
Morteza
Abdolalian, a volunteer at The Real News, researchs Iranian blog
sites.
TRNN’s first
foray into broadcasting was to offer a 24/7 daily news website,
followed later by the launch of an hour-long daily television
news show. Deals for the latter are in place with Link TV,
Regional News Network and MHZ in the U.S., and Vision TV in
Canada, all of which agreed to air the show once it became
available. The network began producing online content in August
2007 with the aim to post regularly updated daily news on a 24-7
website. From June to December 2007, the website has posted over
65 video pieces in the site’s top three focus
categories in December: Pakistan, Iran and U.S. politics.
Meanwhile, the television launch is now scheduled for this
summer.
TRNN’s five-year business
plan for the period 2007–2012, (which is unreleased and
subject to change), states that it requires $8 million by the end
of 2008 to achieve its long-term programming goals. The plan also
calls for $5,950,000 to launch various TRNN programs and
projects, with $3,548,000 allocated for this year’s
news and programming. Independent World Television Inc., the
charitable foundation that supports the work of TRNN, hopes to
raise $6 millionin donations over the course of the year. As with
any company, Jay says, if TRNN doesn’t achieve this
revenue target, the projections for programming operating
expenses will have to be adjusted.
Financial
constraints have also somewhat affected the network’s
ability to hire experienced personnel capable of producing the
level of content TRNN hopes to provide. Jay says it’s
difficult to find experienced people willing to stray away from
the conventional newsroom. Not being able to offer job security
might be part of it, but he says building a team with experience
and skills is a challenge.
Allen Booth,
TRNN’s web developer, points out
that this difficulty is not unique to his company. He says many
organizations have an issue with some staff lacking the necessary
skills to produce top-notch work. “There’s a
bunch of people who can get their work to a certain level with
their half-skills,” he says, “and then they
can’t take it to the next level.” There are
people who can tweak work and bring it to a professional
standard, he says, but there are just not enough of
them.
In addition to a shortage of talent, the
delay in television programming has caused frustration with some
staff. A number of former employees say they left because they
were discouraged by the lack of overall progress. Communications
and volunteer coordinator Geraldine Cahill acknowledges the
tension, but says they didn’t want to go ahead and
produce news content for a few months and then run out of money,
so they decided it would be prudent to wait. “It was
frustrating for the supporters,” she says,
“and it was frustrating for the staff.”
Morteza Abdolalian, a volunteer at The Real News, researchs Iranian blog sites
photo by: Ana Maria De La Fuente
Another issue facing TRNN that also depends
on money is the fact that Jay’s time is sometimes
stretched thin performing the top two roles in the company, CEO
and newsroom boss. As the latter, he approves all stories before
they go live, but as CEO he has to travel to meet supporters and
deal with business concerns. Jeff Boulton, a consultant who
observes company processes and then provides advice on increasing
efficiencies, and who worked at TRNN very briefly as a finishing
editor, says when he was there, work would
sometimes sit in a bottleneck awaiting the senior
editor’s ultimate approval. “You
can’t operate a news organization that way,”
Boulton says. “Shit or get off the
pot.”
Jay’s response is
that this isn’t an issue at all. He says there is no
conflict of interest in acting as both CEO and senior editor.
Media history, he points out, is full of examples of the
principle in a start-up wearing many hats. “How do we
avoid it at this stage?” he asks, before arguing that
in fact the two sides are very much connected. “This
isn’t some institution—the only reason people
have given money is because they trust me,” he says.
“What we do in terms of news, what gets produced, is
entirely about people trusting me and my judgement.”
Having said that, Jay does add that
he’d like to be able to hire someone on the business
side at some point. “My time is too split,”
he admits. But without the additional funds it’ll just
have to wait. What really worries him now, he says, is that the
organization is so young and vulnerable that any slip-up might
make it impossible to sustain TRNN’s reputation.
Despite the slow process, TRNN continues to
aim high and intends to follow through on its promise to offer
the uncompromising journalism that Jay, his staff and even many
former employees so ardently believe in. “The mission
is to produce uncompromising journalism that is fact-based,
verifiable, in-depth,” Cahill says. “That
mission is central and if that gets lost then we might as well
shut down.”
When TRNN began, Jay
says the mantra was “Go big or go home.” The
network definitely still has big ambitions—bigger than
its current budget allows for—and nobody’s
ready to go home. “The effect I hope we’ll
have on journalism is that we’ll create a forum through
video storytelling that we can bring to a mass
audience,” he says. “If we do that then we
can really shake things up—more than just
journalism.”
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