TimesCast, Life at the Office

This week, The New York Times launched a new video series called, TimesCast.

The program, called TimesCast, lasting a few minutes, will appear on the nytimes.com home page at 1 p.m. each day; after 2 p.m., it will move to a less prominent position on the site. (It can always be found at nytimes.com/timescast.) It features interviews with editors and reporters who are covering the major stories, and scenes from meetings among the paper’s top editors discussing events that might go on the front page.

— from Media Decoder

For the most part I would say it is an accurate description of the candor that I experience while working in this large newsroom. In a lot of ways, it is kinda like watching a dry version of The Office. The camera angles are more immediate, and the editing appears to be mostly in-camera, which is refreshing. It also is an example of appointment based viewing on the internet, which doesn’t happen very often on the web, and is still a bit foreign to the way I expect to consume media these days.

I would like to know what the average person thinks about this series. Does it provide more context to the top stories of the day? Is it too much inside baseball?

All said, I have been excited to sit down and watch it take shape.

Note: While I do work at the Times, I do not work on the TimesCast video production team.

The Demand for the Printed Word

In line for The New York TimesHundreds wait in line for a copy of The New York Times, the day after Barack Obama is elected President

On the day after Barack Obama was elected President, people began lining up out side the New York Times in hopes to get a copy of the actual newspaper. As Khoi noted, Print’s Not Dead. As Brian Stelter posted, that they are printing and additional 50,000 copies for the late run for the P.M. rush.

More photos from Nedward.