Nora Young, host of CBC Radio's new tech show, in her studio
photo by: William Stodalka
As I pull out my high-tech Sony recorder, the
producer, Elizabeth Bowie, startles me. She stares at it and
says, “Oh, look at that”—and I
thought Nora Young, Dan Misener and Bowie, the people behind the
technology-based radio show and podcast
Spark would laugh at my two-year-old digital
recorder. But of course, the show’s website says
Spark is “not just technology for
gearheads, it’s about the way technology affects our
lives, and the world around us.”
Last September,
Spark—created by radio host,
producer and journalist, Nora Young—debuted on CBC
Radio One. Young and co-producers Elizabeth Bowie and Dan Misener
had big ideas about how to encourage collective storytelling.
Instead of accepting feedback from its listeners
after an episode, Spark
allows its audience to give input on stories before it goes on
air. With the fusion of creators and audience,
Spark has changed traditional story
production by pooling a mixture of perspectives to create a more
authoritative voice.
To do this, the
producers read the responses to the blogs they’ve
posted and the posts on the message board; they also listen to
audience phone calls. A producer might also contact
someone who leaves a particularly interesting comment or message.
“It’s a great way to do a lot of imaginative
and thought-provoking things,” says Young,
“without having to spend a lot of money, which gives
you a huge amount of freedom.”
Using
the newly installed SocialText, which is a wiki (a collaborative
website that allows users to discuss and add content on a
continuing basis), listeners can suggest ideas on show topics,
add their knowledge, contribute questions for upcoming guests and
interact with Young and the rest of the staff.
Spark experimented with the wiki in
February, airing “The Collaboration Show,” an
entire episode comprised of input from the audience on a script
posted online. All this interactivity means listeners now have
the ability to help decide what will make it on air.
This is how it works: a producer posts an
idea or observation on the blog and asks for feedback with
questions such as, “Is this you? Do you have a funny
story about helping your parent out?” She waits,
usually a week, to collect comments and anecdotes before editing
the information, which Young will later use during her
interviews. Completed interviews then go up on the blog and
listeners have a chance to comment. The final show has all these
layers. Because audience reactions are less of an
afterthought—less “here’s the show,
what do you think, audience?”—it makes for a
more informative, insightful and often funny program.
Misener explains this journalism mash-up best when he
says that part of the appeal of Spark is
that the process is cooked into the show itself. “When
Nora is doing an interview and she can immediately cut to a
question that someone posted on the blog for that particular
interview … I think that’s really neat and
I, as a listener, would like to hear more of
[that].”
After the show airs, it
becomes a podcast. “What we’ve been doing for
the last several years, around things like podcasting, is that
we’ve been trying to pilot things and experiment to see
where we should be and how valuable it is for us,” says
Steve Pratt, director of radio digital programming for CBC Radio
3. So far, audiences seem to really like the format.
As great as this all sounds, the
question remains: will the voice and perspective of a
self-selecting group of CBC listeners ever prove to be more
popular than that of a team of trained, reputable journalists?
“Traditional radio itself still has far larger numbers
and I don’t see that collapsing overnight,”
says Pratt. “I think the interesting thing is that
different people are choosing to do it in different
ways.” Young adds, “There are different
audiences and I think this is the reality that all media are
going to have to start thinking more of as we start spreading
across different platforms.”
Spark is a fresh way of
understanding how a story can be made, and it benefits from not
having a single voice, a single point of view or a single agenda.
“I think it is relinquishing a bit of that know-it-all
control aspect and recognizing that maybe you don’t
know all the answers; there are people in your audience who might
know more about the subject than you do,” says Young.
“And that’s all for the good, I
think.”