Kelly, I don't know how to make this sentence any simpler for you:
the reporters who could shoot weren't as good at it as the videographers who couldn't report and the videographers who could report weren't as good at it as the reporters who couldn't shoot.
Unless you're being deliberately obtuse, it should be no surprise that a reporter and writer who can shoot and has done it on occasion is not as good at videography as the person who's devoted their career to being a cameraperson, and vice versa.
And you're either avoiding answering or unable to articulate what you define as 'not good'. Is it you're somehow convinced the MMJ's can't get the exciting shots? To put it another way; are you criticizing their choice of shots? Are they missing the mark when it comes to camera settings or lighting? Do you actually have noted examples, or is the criticism based on the fact that things are just different than in the old days? And moreover, do you think it really matters to the modern audience used to smartphone video? Seems to me this is very similar to those who criticize voice tracking for radio:
'Back in my day we only had live people behind the mic, and an engineer running the board'. 'Now that they have computers doing the work, everything has turned to sh*t.' My "obtuse" question would be the same: What do you mean by
everything has turned to sh*t? Give me examples.
The reason for asking all this, is I've seen no audience research that has ever been critical of reporters who set up their own shots. There may be the standard criticism of the reporter and how they carry themselves, what they're wearing, how they spoke, they're too young, etc., but similar comments of reporters have been around including in the old days when photogs went out with reporters.
Of course, their shots may not be as professional as someone who gets paid exclusively to get a shot looking a certain way that you may have preferred years ago, but things have changed since then. The migration to online hasn't been held up because viewers are SO offended by the way some MMJ sets up their camera. Why do you think it matters to your average TV viewer in the target demographic(s) today?
If you're telling me that you personally can't tell Emmy Award-winning camerawork from mediocre camerawork, or good writing from serviceable writing, I'll accept that.
If we're talking about a reporter standup at a fire, accident, or shooting, no. Again, your average viewer isn't paying attention to cinematography.
I included the hubbing of master control not as a sign of dilution of quality but as an example of how Scripps (and other broadcast companies) will employ technology at the cost of jobs, which is why I said:
absolutely willing to embrace technology allowing them to cut costs
And my experience is that cutting of costs on the back end, allows for spending that money more on the editorial, or front end, by hiring more reporters, rather than MC operators. More reporters equal more stories and more content.
Which ignores that I got the job at Scripps precisely because I had the skills to be an MMJ:
So many didn't make the cut that they had to then go outside the company, and I happened to know how to shoot, report and edit, so I got the gig. And while I didn't suck as a videographer, I wouldn't have made the top 30 of any of the videographers I've worked with. In fact, if you made a list of all the videographers I had worked with in the 28 years leading up to that job, I'd have been on the bottom of the list.
So what's your problem then? Or are you just saying that someone younger with MMJ skills can't be as good as a grizzled veteran like you?
I've suspected for a while that you don't actually read what I or others post or link. This suggests that at minimum you don't read it carefully.
I read just fine, thanks. I suspect in this case we've been talking around each other trying to understand the point.
I was responding to the report of two Scripps stations using AI in their newsrooms. I have personal experience with Scripps and their willingness to embrace new and sometimes disruptive technology. It got me my job there. I did not advocate abandoning the MMJ model and returning to the old days.
And I've developed and implemented more of that disruptive technology used in the TV news business than most. What I get frustrated about; is when industry veterans are critical of changes due to tech or workflows but aren't able, or refuse to articulate why, other than it's new and people that they had a working relationship with over the years end up losing their jobs. Or that because something isn't done like it was twenty years ago, it's crap. As a friend of mine jokingly used to ask me: "Hey Kelly, how many people did you automate out of work this week?"
Not knowing who you work for, I don't have an opinion on how far I'd trust that assurance. I think some chains will be far less cautious than others.
I'm not looking for your assurance Michael. You seem to be a good guy, but I hardly feel the need to validate my credentials through you.