RT is the first dedicated news network to join YouTube’s elite “1 billion club”, more typically dominated by comedy clips, music videos and entertainment shows produced by such networks as BBC or CBS. “We proved that the mass YouTube audience isn’t just about kittens and Justin Bieber. There’s real demand for serious news online delivered in the right way,” RT chief online content editor Kirill Karnovich-Valua comments on RT’s breakthrough. “It’s a massive landmark,” Google VP and Head of Content for YouTube Robert Kyncl commends RT’s achievement,attributing the network’s success to “learning and earning” an online viewer base. To celebrate the success, RT will broadcast a special “Billion Bulletin”, featuring our biggest viral stories and their heroes, on Monday at 18:00 GMT – on air, online and of course on YouTube. RT began broadcasting in 2005 – the same year YouTube came online – challenging consensus positions in the news media mainstream and reaching out to a savvy viewer base. “Our viewers are people who think deeply about what is happening in the world today. The things that really matter. Those who get tired of, say, round-the-clock coverage of the Royals, or a celebrity death. They are people with a broad range of opinions,” says Karnovich-Valua. After low returns from early ventures on YouTube, the channel came to a policy decision. “YouTube must be a showcase of your brand. Every posted clip must provoke a response, spark a debate. That’s why we have a very selective editorial policy. Our YouTube channel is a kind of a deep digest – where you can find a dynamic mix of RT’s best news reports, raw videos, in-depth documentaries and shows.” “RT was one of the first TV channels to come to YouTube, and one of the first to really ‘get’ the YouTube generation – those who seek out videos themselves, and then share them with their friends,” said Danielle Tiedt, YouTube’s VP of marketing. What at first seemed an underground phenomenon, relying entirely on digital word-of-mouth, soon exploded to become one of the key hubs of the internet. In turn, RT surfed the wave – 19,000 videos have attracted over 6 million comments. As millions tuned in, the broadcast channel and RT on YouTube found their voice (or rather, many articulate, persuasive, and sometimes angry voices). Keiser Report, the hard-hitting financial show presented by Max Keiser with his wife Stacy Herbert has been a hit since its launch in 2009. And while not everyone agrees with his views, the endlessly watchable Nigel Farage has been known far longer to the RT audience than most of the British electorate. On of RT’s biggest coups was The Julian Assange Show. Hundreds of thousands watched lengthy and dense conversations between the WikiLeaks founder and some of the world’s iconoclasts like Slavoj Zizek, Noam Chomsky, and Hezbollah head Hassan Nasrallah. Amid widespread media cheerleading during 2011’s Arab Spring, RT’s experts and correspondents were some of the first to anticipate the fallout of the seismic political shift in the Middle East. RT was the only large TV channel to send its cameras to what seemed to be a marginal New York protest on September 17, 2011, under the strange name of Occupy Wall Street. As that demonstration grew into a worldwide phenomenon, encompassing millions in dozens of countries, RT remained the portal of choice for Occupiers everywhere. Yet it’s not just big stories. Internet privacy and piracy, US drones, GM-food safety – RT has produced arguably more in-depth coverage of these 21st-century issues than any of its rivals. “We know drone warfare always provokes heated debate among our audience. There are so many issues there – freedom, security, accountability – touch-paper issues to web users and this is the conversation we want people to have,” says Karnovich-Valua. Yet despite creating thousands of hours of specially-tailored content, the most viewed videos are inevitably the awe-inspiring, and often terrifying moments in which news media is merely the witness. The cameramen are often not professionals, and sometimes not even human, but the impact is undeniable. RT’s most watched video, with nearly 38 million views, is of the various recordings of the meteorite that hit Siberia earlier this year, while the horror of witnessing the Japanese tsunami in March 2011 put a stop to the endless verbal battles in the comments section as people from around the world registered their shock. “Videos like this are universal to audiences in the US, Europe or Mexico. This is real life. And often people respond to just being shown videos, where they can judge what is happening by themselves,” says Karnovich-Valua. Together with RT Spanish, Arabic and other programming, content produced by RT has already been seen over 1.4 billion times. So, what next? “Our audience makes our news relevant itself – with their ratings, shares and comments. It is the most rewarding thing, working with an online audience – we will innovate and try new projects, and we will see what our audience wants to watch,” says Karnovich-Valua. The next milestone is just around the corner. RT aims to become the first news channel to attract 1 million loyal subscribers on YouTube. So stay tuned, search on and Question More! Igor Ogorodnev, RT … Read More
Genetic Roulette: The Dangers of GMO
http://www.youtube.com/v/kqKTZnwW5sM?version=3&f=videos&app=youtube_gdata Excerpt from: Genetic Roulette: The Dangers of GMO
Chris Matthews to end “The Chris Matthews Show”
Chris Matthews is leaving “The Chris Matthews Show,” his nationally syndicated politics talk show on NBC, whose last episode will air July 21, reports TVNewser. The departure is part of the host’s new long-term contract with MSNBC, where he will continue to host “Hardball.” Matthews says that with his extra time, he will work “on writing books like the one I’m committed to now on the relationship between Tip O’Neill and Ronald Reagan, that and producing documentaries on history and politics.”Matthews’ full statement, below:Continue Reading… … Read More
“Unclaimed” charts search for forgotten Vietman vet
Filmmaker Michael Jorgensen has charted a remarkable journey with Vietnam vet Tom Faunce in documentary “Unclaimed,” which aims to reconnect a U.S. Vietnam war vet, reported dead in 1968, with his American family.The man, whom Faunce believes to be Special Forces Green Beret Master Sgt. John Hartley Robertson, remembers only that his helicopter was shot down in Laos in 1968 and that he had a wife and children in Alabama. Though presumed dead by Americans, the man says that he survived a year of torture in Vietnam and then married the nurse who cared for him.From the Toronto Star:Continue Reading… … Read More
Top 5 investigative videos: Stoned on the job
Notes to self after watching this week’s videos: Never get sent to death row in Yemen, try eating lettuce during a Syrian firefight to calm the nerves, and always nibble sparingly at the brownie when covering a medical marijuana event.For a first look at the best news and documentaries available online, please take a moment to subscribe to The I Files, a highly digestible one-stop news source. Think of The I Files as a pot brownie you find at a party, a delectable treat that takes you on a magical mystery tour of the world’s news.“High on the Job,” Center for Investigative ReportingEver had one of those days at work when one little mistake sends things spiraling out of control? This happened to Michael Montgomery, a reporter for KQED (the public TV station in San Francisco) and the Center for Investigative Reporting, when he inadvertently got a little too close to the story he was covering.Continue Reading… … Read More
China to expand pre-broadcast censorship to cover TV documentaries
China’s top media regulator will expand pre-broadcast censorship to cover television documentaries, in an apparent boost to an already formidable control apparatus, a newspaper said on Friday. China’s State Administration of Radio, Film and Television (SARFT) told TV stations and…
Alexandra Pelosi: “If it’s guilt, or shame — Jim McGreevey’s actually doing some good in the world”
Alexandra Pelosi doesn’t come to a film festival struggling to woo backers or hoping to attract distributors. For the last 13 years, the youngest child of House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi has been employed by HBO, which has enabled her to make the documentaries that have compelled her most and cover the kinds of political topics that keep America up late at night talking: homelessness, immigration and naturalization, the evangelical community and, with her latest film, women’s jails, recidivism, homosexuality in the Catholic and Episcopal churches and, in no small measure, redemption. Best known for getting on the campaign bus with then-presidential candidate George W. Bush for her Emmy-winning “Journeys With George” to her doc about the closeted evangelical, “The Trials of Ted Haggard,” she has just arrived at Sundance to present her latest, “Fall to Grace,” her 18-month study of former New Jersey governor Jim McGreevey.Continue Reading… … Read More



