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Catholic Media Connections

H2O - Video Zenit

December 14th, 2006 by Michael Kreidler

I was speaking with Carlos Briceno today and he gave me the head’s up on an interesting new project called H20. The full article is below:

News agency with ties to Legionaries to launch video service (Updated with reply)

Created Dec 7 2006 - 06:46

By JOHN L. ALLEN JR.
New YorkA Vatican-endorsed TV news service will attempt to bring to the video age the same style of church-friendly reporting associated with the Zenit News Agency, an on-line project launched in 1998 with ties to Regnum Christi, the lay branch of the Legionaries of Christ.The new “H2O” broadcast service – named, organizers say, for water as the symbol of life – is intended as a video news source available through the Internet, on cell phones with video capability, as well as through conventional Catholic television networks. The project was formally presented at an Oct. 10-12 world conference of Catholic television providers in Madrid, Spain, convened by the Vatican.Initially, plans call for “H2O,” with offices in Rome, to produce five daily news items of one and a half to two minutes each: two on the activity of the pope, two on the church in other parts of the world, and one of artistic and cultural interest. Interviews with Catholic newsmakers and, to the extent possible, overviews of new Vatican documents will also be part of the mix.

The news items will be free of charge to Catholic TV networks which choose to broadcast them, and to Internet users. Initially, “H2O” will emphasize delivery on the Internet, attempting to reach the estimated 20 million users of Catholic web sites worldwide.

Organizers say they will try to take a positive approach.

“We won’t go looking for polemics,” said Jesús Colina, a Spaniard who founded and currently serves as director of Zenit, and who has been asked by the Vatican to oversee the new video project.

“That’s my personal style, and it’s what we follow at Zenit,” said Colina, a member of Regnum Christi.

The idea for a video version of Zenit’s text-based news service, which is offered daily to some 240,000 subscribers on five continents, was the brainchild of Monsignor Enrique Planas y Como of the Pontifical Council for Social Communications. Planas asked Colina to oversee the project.

Though “H2O” carries the formal backing of the Vatican, and the Vatican Television Center will provide some content, Colina told NCR that “H2O” will be independent and financially self-sustaining. Assuming that funding can be found, organizers intend to provide a couple of “trial run” packages in January, with the full service to debut in March.

The news items are to be released in English, Spanish, Italian, French and German, though Colina told NCR these plans are subject to review based on market interest. Colina said he’d also like to broadcast in Arabic, but those plans are more tentative.

Colina told NCR Nov. 14 that while content can be produced by anyone, “H2O” intends to take advantage of Zenit’s existing network of contributors and correspondents around the world.

Colina said that “H2O” will also enjoy the collaboration of a new religious congregation founded in Spain in 1994 called the “Servant Sisters of the Hogar de la Madre,” some of whose members have taken up video production as a specialty. In the United States, the community runs a program of vocational discernment for women at Ave Maria University in Naples, Florida, an institution founded by Domino’s pizza magnate Thomas S. Monaghan.

One aim of “H2O,” Colina said, is to promote a “common platform” of production and editorial standards among the roughly 2,000 Catholic television channels around the world, so that content becomes more interchangeable and “synergies” can be created.

Colina said that while “H2O” does not have any formal agreement with EWTN, the independent American Catholic network which is by far the largest Catholic TV service in the world, he hopes the news items “will be so well-made, so interesting, that EWTN feels it can’t pass them up.”

Colina said he also hopes to work cooperatively with an already-existing Rome-based video production company called “Rome Reports,” founded by a Spanish Opus Dei member named Santiago de la Cierva. That agency, Colina said, is aimed primarily at the commercial and state-run TV market, while “H2O” is intended for Catholic TV outlets and the individual user on the Internet.

Colina is a member of Regnum Christi with close ties to Fr. Marcial Maciel Degollado, founder of the Legionaries of Christ, who was asked by the Vatican on May 19 to observe a life of “prayer and penance, renouncing every public ministry” in the wake of charges of sexual abuse lodged against him by former Legionaries. In 2003, Colina produced a book-length interview with Maciel titled Christ is My Life.

When the Vatican disciplined Maciel, its public statement rejected any collective guilt on the part of the order or other groups founded by the Mexican priest. The decision to entrust Colina with the “H2O” project is thus seen by some Vatican observers as a sign that the Legionaries and Regnum Christi are still in good graces.

Privately, Vatican sources told NCR that another factor weighed in the decision to launch an official TV service. In some Vatican quarters, sources said, there has long been concern that networks such as EWTN are becoming the “voice of the church” in the broadcast arena, without any oversight from church officials. The idea of a Vatican-sponsored news outlet, these sources said, thus restores a measure of “control” over the message.

This becomes a sore point, sources said, when Catholic TV outlets for one reason or another downplay aspects of the church’s message. Some Vatican officials, for example, feel EWTN did not give adequate attention to the church’s criticism of the Iraq war for fear of alienating conservative American Catholics. In other cases, sources said, there’s concern that some Catholic TV services are run by personnel who may not be fully supportive of church teaching on issues such as sexual morality or papal authority.

A preview of the H2O web site can be found here: H2O News [1]

RESPONSE FROM “H2O” RECEIVED DEC. 10
“Given that some affirmations in this article give a different idea of the audio-visual information project H2O, the organizers offer some clarifications:

* “H2O does not have any connection with the Legionaries of Christ. Jesús Colina does not represent the Legionaries of Christ or the Regnum Christi movement.

* “In the indications received from the personnel of the Holy See with whom the organizers of H2O are in contact, there has always been the counsel to help EWTN grow, never the contrary. The proof is that representatives of EWTN were invited to the presentation of H2O at the Conference of Madrid.

* “It’s true that free distribution is planned for Internet users, as the article says, but for subscribers to TV channels, Catholic or non-Catholic, initially payments are anticipated.”


Links:
[1] http://www.h2onews.org/home.php

Audio Tours

November 26th, 2006 by Michael Kreidler

I hope all y’all had a great Thanksgiving. I am just back from conducting a two-day Catholic radio training here in the midwest. I am taking today (and the next few days) for recoup.

I came across this article the other day:

New Downloadable Audio Tours Offer Yet Another Way For Visitors To Explore The City

PHILADELPHIA, Nov. 20 — A new series of free, dynamically mapped
and completely customizable sound-seeing tours of Philadelphia is
available from soundaboutphilly.com. An initiative of The Pew
Charitable Trusts and the Greater Philadelphia Tourism Marketing
Corporation (GPTMC), the SoundAboutPhilly tours concentrate on
lesser-known city experiences and combine interesting tales, fun facts
and lively music to tell the area’s story.

I have been thinking, for quite some time now, that those of us in Catholic podcasting should take it upon ourselves to begin recording walking tours of shrines and other places of ‘Catholic interest’. Wouldn’t it be great to go to a site, download a walking tour of the National Shrine of the Immaculate conception before heading there? Each of us could start with a something near our own homes. That alone would provide several dozen tours with which to start.

Just a thought.

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Broadcast to podcast to Godcast: Streaming faith to Catholic ears

September 27th, 2006 by Michael Kreidler

Broadcast to podcast to Godcast: Streaming faith to Catholic ears
By Mark Pattison
9/27/2006

Catholic News Service
WASHINGTON (CNS) – If anyone has ears to hear, let them hear podcasts.

That seems to be today’s adaptation of Jesus’ familiar exhortation.

Podcasts are recordings that are prepared with actual radio broadcast material with one pair of ears in mind rather than a mass audience. The new venues are computers and iPods, the wildly popular personal music storage system. The term podcasting is derived from the iPod name.

For one online Christian podcast directory, the most popular podcasts by far are by a Catholic priest, the late Father Al Lauer. Before he died four years ago, he had made a number of recordings – before podcasts became all the rage. [More…]

International Herald Tribune: Podcasting

September 23rd, 2006 by Michael Kreidler

From the International Herald Tribune:

While it is possible to create a podcast with nothing more than a computer, a microphone and some audio editing software, there are times when it is nice to be able to conduct interviews, gather sound or record programs when away from a PC. For that you will need some type of portable recording equipment. [More…]

Thanks to Fr. Bershoner for the head’s-up.

September EQ Magazine

September 23rd, 2006 by Michael Kreidler

I came across a great set of articles in the Sept. 2006 EQ Magazine. It deals with a comprehensive article on all you need to know about starting podcasting. It is the best magazine treatment of podcasting I have seen.

Unfortunately, they do not do a very good job of archiving their articles online. So, there is very little on their site regarding the content of last month’s (Sept. 2006) edition of the magazine.

They do have a place on their site where you can order back issues, but you might want to check first with your library. The magazine, in general, has loads of great stuff on recording, software, and hardware.

Pondering the future of radio

June 29th, 2006 by Michael Kreidler

“Radio” today is really just transferred audio. In the past, we only received radio from programming broadcast by stations via a transmitter tower. Now radio also includes online streaming, downloading, podcasting, timeshifting, file sharing and more. We’re all listening to more “radio”. So what is this doing to traditional radio?

read more | digg story

DwM in CAMECO Magazine

May 28th, 2006 by Michael Kreidler

An article (in pdf format) recently was published in the CAMECO Magazine. It was written by Carlos and talks extensively about DwM specifically and podcasting generally. The acronym CAMECO stands for Catholic Media Council, a research and counseling office in the field of communication.

It is a great article. Good work Carlos.

Thank pod, a sermon you can download

December 29th, 2005 by Michael Kreidler

An article from the New York Daily News on Godcasting. The article states that godcasting is the fasting growing genre in podcasting. It includes the usuals subjects, but has some interesting twists.

Quick read, let me know what you think.

Podcast Sermons Attracting Worshipers

December 28th, 2005 by Michael Kreidler

According to an article in icLiverpool.co.uk, having sermons available for download is having a positive effect on church attendance.

“Large numbers of new people are coming down to the church and joining our congregation simply because of the internet downloads and podcasts. The sermons are playing a huge role in attracting people of all ages, especially youngsters who are searching for their spirituality.”

Are any of you experiencing the same effect? Let me know.

Podcasting: A Guy Thing

December 28th, 2005 by Michael Kreidler

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This from CNET:

By Jonathan Skillings

Chances are, if you’ve recorded a podcast in the last year, the people listening in were men.

A survey in December by Podtrac, a company that aims to connect podcasters and advertisers, showed that 78 percent of those who have ever listened to a podcast are male. That pattern is in keeping with early adoption of a wide array of technologies, from PCs to video games.

“With podcasting just over a year old, the current maleness of the podcast audience at the aggregate level is consistent with gender usage trends of the early Web,” Mark McCrery, Podtrac’s CEO, said in a statement.

But the survey, released Tuesday, also pointed to a faster shift to a more even balance between the genders. Of the respondents who had listened to a podcast within the preceding week, 51 percent were women.

The online audio phenomenon is ringing bells with an ever-wider audience, according to Podtrac’s figures. One-third of respondents were familiar with the term “podcasting,” one-third of those who are familiar have ever listened to a podcast, and two in five of those who have ever listened had done so in the preceding seven days.

Although podcasts–audio programs designed for distribution over the Web to MP3 players such as Apple Computer’s iPod–haven’t been on the scene long, they are already attracting the attention of advertisers and the organizational skills of Internet giants such as Yahoo.

The study, commissioned by Podtrac and conducted by custom research specialist Taylor Nelson Sofres, surveyed 1,000 adults from the general online population.