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Channel 7


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Detroit’s Interactive Newsman

Well, it only took me about a month to get around to posting this. Blame college, finals and life. Last month I met with Channel 7’s Stephen Clark to job shadow him for the night. Afterwards I had to write about my experience for one of my journalism classes. Here’s how my visit went.


I arrived at the studio, proudly known as ‘Broadcast House,’ around 5:50 p.m. just as Stephen Clark was preparing to go on the air for the 6 o’clock newscast. I was excited, but I was trying to stay collected. The last thing I wanted to be was star-struck. But, I had grown up watching Channel 7 and some of these reporters, and to actually meet them in person was exciting and a little daunting.

Stephen Clark greeted me in the lobby shortly after he wrapped the 6 o’clock. He had been tweeting at me throughout the show, which is something he’s actually become quite well known for doing. Clark started the #backchannel about two years ago as part of his vision of trying to reconnect with his audience. Twitter was still relatively new at the time, but Clark recognized the potential the new social media tool held.

Clark has never been the type of journalist to shun new technologies or reject new, maybe even better, ways to deliver the news. During our hour or so long talk at his desk in the newsroom he said something that really resonated with me. He said that we weren’t just journalists anymore, we weren’t just there to report the news—we’re content creators, and the form in which we produce this content and the mediums through which we deliver it is constantly evolving.

I decided a while ago to brand myself as a multimedia journalist. It seemed like the logical thing to do. After all, I wasn’t just a writer. I could make videos, I could take pictures, I could manage my own blog. But I also wanted to do broadcasting and so I thought that dubbing myself a multimedia journalist made the most sense, but now, I want to start thinking of myself as a content creator.

Clark didn’t get to where he is today because he had a good news voice or because he could read a teleprompter well, albeit those qualities I’m sure helped a little. He got to where he is today because he was never afraid to push the envelope, do more than what was expected of him, or learn new technologies or take different approaches to reporting. He’s a one-man-band. He writes his own copy, shoots his own video, edits his own packages and serves as the face of one of most storied and prominent news brands in Metro Detroit. That’s no small task.

For years Clark sat in front of the camera delivering the news to an audience that was on the other side of the glass. There was a barrier between him and those watching him and he grew tired of it, admittedly saying he grew bored with his job. He wanted the news to be interactive. He wanted to talk with his audience and have them talk back. The #backchannel—essentially a streaming conversation with his viewers through tweets—was born out of boredom, out of feeling complacent. As a young journalist I’ve learned that complacency in this business is a “four letter word.” Innovation, creativity and serious hard work are what separate good journalists from great ones.

Before I left, Clark said something to me along the lines of: as long as you want it bad enough, you’ll make it in this business. I think I might make it. 


12:45 pm: jdetroit1 note

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The #Backchannel Back Story

What is the #backchannel exactly? And how’d it come to be? This video does a pretty good job of summing up one of the biggest steps forward in television news broadcasting since, well, the television. Channel 7’s own Stephen Clark explains:

Stephen Clark’s #Backchannel from Tim Davis on Vimeo.

04:13 pm: jdetroit

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Channel 7 looks to Detroit in 2020

WXYZ Channel 7, the ABC affiliate in Detroit, recently launched an incredibly innovative and unique project called Detroit 2020. The project will be a full-blown community effort that will get up-close and personal with the citizens of the Metro Detroit area to inspire action and change throughout the entire region.

It no doubt lives up to Channel 7’s slogan in showing they really are “On Your Side” and it’s another example of how Channel 7 has been on a roll lately when it comes to finding new and relevant ways of reaching out and engaging their audience and the community.

Detroit 2020 gives Detroiters a forum where they can stand up and bring attention to the issues that matter most to them—to all of us.

I hope that I can somehow get involved and be a part of this project and I really am thrilled to see this thing develop and grow into something huge.

Check out the site to learn more about the project and to submit your ideas, thoughts, photos or videos.

Detroit 2020 logo courtesy of detroit2020.com WXYZ-TV Detroit

11:24 pm: jdetroit

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“I’m a Believer” in Detroit

I think it’s a safe bet that anyone from the Metro Detroit could probably recall at least one of the many great ad campaigns for the city of Detroit that have aired over the past few decades.  The image campaign I probably remember most is the classic “Stand up and tell ‘em you’re from Detroit” that played on Channel 7 during the late 1980s and early 90s and claimed “there’s no town like Motown.” 

It turns out Detroit’s about ready for another image-boosting campaign and this one is set to roll out by the start of next year. The Detroit News today talked about the latest request of civic leaders to Detroit residents to declare “I’m a Believer” in the city.

The new ad campaign, which is being filmed at the WXYZ-TV Channel 7 studios in Southfield, will feature local celebrities in t.v. ads and billboards  as a sort of “call-to-action.”

The campaign already has a live website www.believeindetroit.org that will help direct residents to various volunteer opportunities in the city as well as allow for donations to the campaign.

Below is a video of another, more recent, ad campaign from Channel 7 that aired in the early 2000s

10:09 am: jdetroit

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Positive Detroit!

From blogs to Facebook to Twitter, an entire online community exists that is committed to finding the best in Detroit and sharing it with the rest of the world.  WXYZ Channel 7 here in Detroit recently reported on this new trend while highlighting one of the pioneers IAmYoungDetroit.com as well as one of my favorite blogs Positive Detroit.com.  Click here to see and read the report.

Also, just this past Sunday, Channel 7 also featured Phil Cooley, the young model turned entrepreneur who found his way back to the D where he decided to start his booming business that has now become Slows BBQ down in Corktown.  Click here to see and read that report.

Just a couple, of the many examples, I wanted to share of the movement around the area to rethink and reinvent a more positive city.

01:03 pm: jdetroit3 notes

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