Firstly, I find there is too much introductory information in these. We already know how to do audio stories for radio features, this doesnt seem to be that different.

The planning information is useful  (knowing the right gear to bring and to conduct pre-interviews), and the information for the field is as well (asking the right questions, how to use a microphone, etc), but again, all things we learned over the course of our previous broadcast courses.

Going through the example and creating my own version of the Mayan tourism story, I felt as if it was no different than creating a (very) short radio feature, complete with clips, voiceover, background sound, and natural sounds.

Would an online audio story be different?

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Secondary Sources

http://www.thehilltimes.ca/html/cover_index.php?display=story&full_path=/2008/august/4/soldiers/&c=1

http://psychcentral.com/news/2008/10/02/ptsd-after-military-peacekeeping/3049.html

http://westislandgazette.com/news/5565

http://ptsdcombat.blogspot.com/2007/07/ptsd-figures-for-canadas-afghanistan.html

Primary Sources

http://www.forces.gc.ca/site/news-nouvelles/view-news-afficher-nouvelles-eng.asp?id=2844

http://respectfulofotters.blogspot.com/2006/07/trauma-is-easy.html

http://publications.cpa-apc.org/media.php?mid=323

Contacted Interview Subjects

Dr. Norman Shields, Psychologist at the OSI clinic at the Ste Anne De Bellevue Veteran’s Hospital. I will be interviewing him at the hospital on Friday. This will probably be my audio interview, with pictures of him, the clinic, and the hospital so as to create a vuvox element with audio clips.

Pierre Trépanier, Coordinator of OSI Peer Support organization’s Montreal office. I will be speaking to Pierre in late February, as he is out of town until then. I have not yet determined whether he is comfortable on camera, but he could be an audio or video component.

Saxon Murray, Afghanistan Veteran. He has minor PTSD symptoms and is willing to offer perspective on what might cause them in Afghanistan. He also says he has many friends suffering from OSIs. I’m not sure if Saxon himself is the ideal candidate, but whichever is the best interview subject based on having a compelling story and being a “good talker” as people in TV would say, I can have a video interview with.

I have received emails from two veterans suffering from PTSD, one from Afghanistan and one from a conflict in the Balkans. They have given me graphic descriptions of their experiences, but have asked to remain anonymous. They have agreed to give their stories as anonymous testimonials.

Other Potential Interview Subjects

Dan Hamelin, suffers from PTSD after being involved in the rescue operations of Swissair flight 111 off the coast of Nova Scotia in 1998. I have not yet determined whether he was in the Navy or Coast Guard as communications are very initial (he emailed me today).

Maj. André F. Berdais, a senior public affairs officer, at the Canadian Forces Health Service Group. He is quoted in one of the articles above.

I am looking for McGill or Concordia Professors performing research on the subject. Dr. Alain Brunet at McGill Medicine’s Department of Psychiatry worked on a study on PTSD a few years ago (see primary sources above).

I am also obviously still searching for more veterans, especially one willing to be interviewed and have his or her name used. Seeing as some are messaging me wishing to remain anonymous, I could also create a section in my piece for anonymous testimonials from veterans.

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Much has changed with regards to my PTSD story in the last few hours. I recieved a phone call from the veterans hospital in Ste Anne de Bellevue from an extremely helpful woman working in communications. She will be able to arrange for me to visit the hospital to interview a few people who work in the operational stress injuries clinic, and hopefully gather some multimedia content such as photos, audio, or video. She has also given me a list of veteran’s groups that should be able to put me in touch with PTSD victims, one of which has already responded to me stating that they should be able to find me subjects for interviews.

She also passed on these links of blogs:

http://psychcentral.com/news/2008/10/02/ptsd-after-military-peacekeeping/3049.html.

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I unfortunately don’t have much to update on my Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder with Afghanistan veterans pitch this week as I just finished my 4-week CTV internship and have had little time so far to chase down interview subjects.

I have made phone calls to the Canadian Forces in Montreal and Ottawa, the Royal 22nd Regiment in Quebec City, the Veteran’s hospital in Ste Anne de Bellevue, and an Operational Stress Councillor with the Canadian Forces here in Montreal. Most calls resulted in left voicemails and the only live voices I have encountered have redirected me to other offices.

The “Married to the Canadian Forces” support group specifically refuses requests to interview veterans or their families.

I will have plenty of time later this week to chase down some sources, and should phone calls get me nowhere I am prepared to present myself at various locations to find appropriate people to speak to in person.

Through friends I have found potential interview subjects with at least one Veteran, but not one that suffers from any operational stress injury.

Within the next week I will know whether I can get the interview subjects I need most or whether to change my angle or go ahead with another story.

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I have had a highly frustrating time trying to create a panoramic image over the last hour. I took a 360 array of images out the window of a corner classroom in the CJ building, uploaded them to my laptop and went to the Clevr website. After downloading the software, I followed the instructions and clicked “stitch”. The program then continued to do absolutely nothing for 10 minutes. I tried again and achived the same result.

I then went to Gigapan and found out that you needed to already have a photo stitched to upload. After searching for another program I could use to stitch, I found a free trial of PTGui, which I downloaded and installed. This program worked, but the stitched photo looked terrible. It mentioned a lack of “control points” between two particular successive photos, which I followed the instructions to attempt to fix.

The resulting panorama was only slightly improved after I had also taken out half of the pictures, making it more of a 120 degree photo rather than 360. The photo was apparently not large enough for Gigapan and it didn’t load onto Clevr, for reasons I can’t figure out.

So i uploaded it to my website server, and you can see it here

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There has been a great amount of information that has come out recently in Canada about how the Canadian Forces (CF) are dealing with Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) among veterans. The CF has recently released a backgrounder on the subject, and ministry of veterans affairs has recently announced the establishment of a new residential clinic for the treament of complex operational stress injuries (OSIs) such as post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). The clinic will be located at the veterans’ hospital in Ste-Anne De Bellevue, in the West Island of Montreal. There is also research being conducted into the subject, and much more information available from the CF as well as veteran’s support groups.

I am interested in creating a multiplatform investigative piece looking into the prevalence of PTSD among our veterans and how the military is treating it. This would include interviews with veterans, their families, CF spokespeople, researchers and experts. It could also include visuals of the hospital in Ste-Anne’s and other facilites, and facts and figures about PTSD.

Whereas the CF was previously reluctant to divulge information about PTSD, it is now opening up and this is an opportunity to look into an issue that is not well undersood and historically unter-treated by militaries around the world. The opening of the facility in Ste Anne’s follows the creation of the Veteran’s Charter in 2006 by the minister of veteran’s affairs.

As someone with and interest in political affairs and friends in the military I find this a topic I would find great interest in. I also happen to live in the West Island, so the Ste Anne’s hospital would be easy to visit on a regular basis, should I gain any kind of access.

A friend who is familiar with the topic has sent me the following links for leads. As this is a blog post type of pitch, I think it would be appropriate to include them:

CF backgrounder on OSI (Operational Stress Injuries) and PTSD
http://www.forces.gc.ca/site/news-nouvelles/view-news-afficher-nouvelles-eng.asp?id=2844

Other DND Health Services links:
http://www.cmp-cpm.forces.gc.ca/ps/hs-ss/index-eng.asp
http://www.forces.gc.ca/health-sante/ps/mh-sm/otssc-cstso/default-eng.asp
http://www.forces.gc.ca/site/news-nouvelles/view-news-afficher-nouvelles-eng.asp?id=2691

Ombudsman stuff:
http://www.ombudsman.forces.gc.ca/rep-rap/sr-rs/osi-tso-3/index-eng.asp
http://www.ombudsman.forces.gc.ca/rep-rap/sr-rs/pts-ssp/index-eng.asp
http://www.dnd.ca/hr/cfpn/engraph/03_02_ombudsman_e.asp

Other:
http://www.thehilltimes.ca/html/cover_index.php?display=story&full_path=/2008/august/4/soldiers/&c=1

For sources, here’s a link to the Married to the Canadian Forces forum, a forum for military spouses:
http://www.marriedtothecanadianforces.com/

This forum is more open and easily searchable
http://forums.army.ca/forums/index.php?PHPSESSID=tlhk83fperttsbp47i6qqesm20&action=search

And for vets and dealing with PTSD for earlier wars, check out:
http://www.vac-acc.gc.ca/clients/sub.cfm?source=steannes
http://www.vac-acc.gc.ca/clients/sub.cfm?source=mhealth

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The aspect I most noticed about this research project is the overall ease of use and interactivity of its content. Whereas a print article has static text that can really only be read how it is written, and broadcast pieces which must be watched or listened to in the format they are edited, here Graeme Smith essentially delivers all of the material obtained in his research in a way a consumer could easily navigate. This is the best example I’ve seen of “showing your work” reporting, a term I remember from grade school math class.

Although Smith produces edited videos to summarize each section, I found it creative how all of the video materials, graphics, and interactive commentary are included in each section. This allows the consumer to perouse the material in whichever order they choose, consume as much as they choose, and revisit material at any point. This provides more information for the consumer, and allows the consumer to more easily draw their own conclusions about the Taliban.

The videos themselves are also produced in a somewhat viral format in an obvious effort to give the project some legs online.

It must have been a challenge to Smith to convince the researcher to do so many interviews, perhaps risking his own life. It also must have been a challenge logistically to train the researcher to properly obtain the video and properly interview the subjects, not to mention find the subjects.

I would take a guess at how many people were involved in the project, but I counted nine in the credits. Smith must have been accompanied by a camera person, a translator, and potentially a producer in Afgnanistan, with at least an editor and a web developer here in Canada.

The videos gave a good introduction to the project, and their presentation was sure to attract more eyeballs than text, and it seems Smith was making a real effort to use multimedia, even recording the audio biography.

The project was more consice and compact than the mental health package, which may convince consumers to stay on longer.

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I’ve always been in tune with technology, but I always seem to be a bit behind the curve. I took a PR class last year where we learned how to group people into categories based on how quickly they catch on to trends or advancements in technology or society. The top group would be those trendsetters who are always the first to create, discover, or use what’s new and what’s hip. The second would be the first responders, those who immediately follow whatever the trendsetters do, then the second responders, those who don’t jump to it immediately but eventually find it unavoidable to catch on. Finally, there are the laggers, who either wait so long to catch on that by the time they do the next big thing has already started, or never bother.

I always tend to find myself in the second responders group. I’m never the first to get anything, and i only really buy into trends or new technology when it’s become obvious that they are trends or the technology has become the norm. Shortly after i do, the next thing always comes out.

Every computer I’ve ever had became old news shorty after i bought it. The same goes for every cell phone I’ve had. I just bought a macbook a few months before the new macbooks came out.

As a kid, i played computer games because my parents seemed to be the only in existence that did not allow their children to have game systems like Nintendo. I’m not sure how effective the tactic was, because i spent the entirety of my weekends when i was 13 at my best friend’s house playing Goldeneye and Mario Kart on Nintendo64. The rest of the week would be spent in my room playing Civilization or NHL 93 on a pre-pentium computer. It would be another couple years until i finally had a real social life.

Then came this fabulous new system call the internet. I remember the first time we got it, and had no idea what to do with it. In retrospect this would seem wierd today, but the first thing we ever did regularly on the internet was chatrooms. Back then, the subject matter was irrelevant. It was the sheer amazement that i was talking live with people all over North America that made it fun. This soon expanded out of chat rooms and into an early version of AOL Instant Messenger, where the norm was to find a random user and ask “A/S/L?” for Age/Sex/Location. I remember finding it so cool when I was talking to some girl from Texas who liked some rapper called “M&M”. Oh 90s. And no, I don’t remember any old men asking if I want to meet and if I can keep a secret.

Although I was never on the forefront of new technologies, I have since then used computers on a daily basis, and it definitely helped that I went to a private high school where every student had an IBM laptop starting in 1998. Once again, although I was there the first year laptops were issued, the old clunker laptop I got that year was quickly surpassed by new models, yet that was the laptop I was to keep until I graduated. I know, “poor me,” but you see how it furthers the narrative I began earlier?

Since my high school, including teachers, communicated through AOL IM, i lived off of instant messaging up until about three years ago, when I realized I became annoyed every time someone messaged me, just like I’m annoyed every time my blackberry rings, yet I’ll never be more than 10 feet away from it.

I briefly used Myspace after spending some time in the U.S. at the height of Myspace mania, but when it became apparent that in Canada, everyone was using Facebook, I gave into that. Once again, falling nicely into the “second responders” category.

I would say I lived on Facebook for two years, but lately I’ve become less interested and I’ve generally had less time to waste on it. It’s stil the primary mode of communication with friends of mine from my 12 years of life in Ontario (Age 12-24), but not so much locally. I’m proud to say my mother is a Facebook friend, with no restrictions of any kind. My little sister is less open.

Outside of techonolgy, I can pretty much describe myself as someone who was married to music in one way or another from the age of 14 until the age of 24, but who was cheating on music with politics for the last four years of that marriage before finally breaking it off cold turkey a year ago and eloping to the states for a honeymoon with politics.

My interest in journalism pretty much stems from a fascination with American politics and the global events it affects. I began blogging on the American election last summer at alexleduc.com, and by September my columns were on several community newspaper websites as well as in the Concordian, and I was invited to comment on the election on CTV, which ended up earning me an internship in their newsroom.

Although I have grown to love blogging and writing, I am having an awesome time being introduced to television news and I may eventually end up with a career in TV, where I can always blog on the side. My ideal assignment would naturally be White House correspondent and my ideal job would be a 24h cable news host at CNN.

That way, I can hold a reasonable hope of eventually graduating to “first responder.”

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My impression of the “Reporting Across Platforms” course was that it was helpful in guiding our mindsets to this type of reporting, as most of us are already geared towards looking at a story in terms of its potential for either broadcast or print.

Aside from that, the exercise felt like reporting on any other story.

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