Wednesday, December 16, 2015

Innovative podcasts and the future of journalism

Olga Ruiz: Create something unique.
PAMPLONA, Spain -- In August of 2013, Olga Ruiz returned from a refreshing summer vacation ready to start her 16th season on the COPE radio network in Barcelona.

But on her arrival, the managers told her and her team that they were being fired. "The best period in my professional life began the moment they fired me," she told me. "They gave me a second life in journalism."

Two weeks later, she invited her old team and some other journalists to her home for dinner. They decided to launch a new radio organization with long-form stories of up to 30 minutes on topics ignored or treated superficially by mainstream media. They would devote obsessive attention to the quality of the sound.

Versión en español


A different path

The new medium would offer podcasts created by 14 different journalists, each lending their own personality, and covering topics from culture to politics to art or any subject that interested them.

One year after that fateful dinner, ElExtrarradio.com -- the name they gave to this venture -- won the prestigious Premio Ondas 2013 for "innovation in radio" given by Cadena Ser, the country's major commercial broadcasting network. The prize simply vindicated the vision and the work of Ruiz, the director, and María Jesús Espinosa de los Monteros, the assistant director and her chief business partner.

Ruiz described her experience Nov. 27 to students and faculty of the Department of Communication of the University of Navarra.

One of the students asked her how to know whether an idea is good or bad and whether to pursue it. "We all have ideas," Ruiz said. "The difference between the ones that succeed or not is to put them into practice. If you put them into practice they might not succeed but at least you have tried. If you don't try, you surely will never succeed."

Persistence in spite of everything

When it launched, ElExtrarradio financed itself with a crowdfunding campaign that raised 4,000 euros (about $4,100), which was used to outfit a radio studio in Ruiz's home and buy equipment for the journalists on the team. The initial investment of each of the participants was 300 euros.

Three years later, no one at ElExtrarradio is collecting a salary. Donations by users are used to cover expenses of maintaining the website, buying equipment and covering operating costs such as travel. Each team member makes a living from other activities, mostly in journalism, but also teaching and, in one case, by telemarketing.

The audience has grown to 25,000 podcast downloads a month, and the site has 11,000 followers on Twitter as well as 2,600 likes on Facebook.

Ruiz gives credit to other pioneers of podcasting in Spanish for showing her the way, in particular Javier Gallego of Carne Cruda in Spain and Daniel Alarcon of Radio Ambulante, a popular Spanish language podcast based in the U.S.

Since September, Ruiz has supported herself with a full-time job at a radio magazine on Radio Nacional as well as creating political commentarios for six other media outlets. In addition, she continues to produce her podcast, Cuando éramos periodistas (When we were journalists). Assistant director Espinosa de los Monteros also has several other paying gigs, as a writer on books and culture for various publications. In addition she continues to produce her podcast, El látigo de Joyce (Joyce's whip) and has taken over most of the editing at ElExtrarradio.

Create, believe, and dream

To maintain the desired level of originality and quality requires time and resources. A report by Carlos Moreira on the girls of Afghanistan who dress as boys so that they can attend school, Bacha Posh Girls, required him to travel there and record their voices. Many of them, now adults, are leaders in their country.

The podcasts of ElExtrarradio have received a number of other journalism prizes, but it has not been easy, Ruiz said. "To be an entrepreneur at times means merely surviving, and surviving is not easy. How many times are you able to live with the question, Is it worth it? You have to be able to answer yes every time."

"Doing things is much more difficult than simply saying you are going to do them. It's much more gratifying as well. This isn't like in the movies where someone has a good idea and makes it happen and is a success. It's not that easy."

Ruiz's message to the students in Navarra was that the profession offers them the possibility to innovate and create the future of journalism. "This is the time to try things, to make mistakes, to do research, to experiment with the fantastic facilities you have at your disposal and to create while you are still studying. You have to create, believe, and dream."

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Laid-off journalist finds niche in data visualization  
Jeff Jarvis's new role for journalists: be the organizer  
Nonprofit journalism tries to make it in Spain

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