NBC News launches digital video service
to woo social media users
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[June 13, 2017]
By Jessica Toonkel
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Comcast Corp's NBC
News unit on Tuesday launched a digital video service that targets the
growing number of viewers who get their news on social media.
The service, called "NBC Left Field," is producing short documentaries
and features for Alphabet Inc's YouTube, Facebook and Instagram with the
intention of eventually running ads.
News organizations like NBC News are under pressure to find ways to draw
younger viewers who are increasingly turning to YouTube and Facebook
instead of television. Only 8 percent of viewers of national broadcast
television news in 2016 were in the 18-34 age bracket, according to
Nielsen.
"It’s my belief that broadcasters need to begin viewing these hubs as
digital cities," said Matt Danzico, head of NBC Left Field. "So in the
same way that it’s clearly important NBC have local bureaus to serve
news and information for, about and within the actual cities their
audiences live, it’s now imperative that we exist within these digital
municipalities."
Left Field has hired 10 full-time journalists with broad backgrounds,
such as a former photographer and cinematographer who worked in the
Middle East and a fiction writer. They will work from an office in
downtown New York, away from the headquarters.
While initially the videos will not have ads, NBC News is looking at
different formats for advertising, including branded content, said Nick
Ascheim, head of digital at NBC News.
Left Field will have an international focus with the aim of attracting a
global audience. For example, one of its first segments is about asylum
squatters in Amsterdam. Another video is about a Swedish museum of
failed gadgets.
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The NBC logo is picture atop their office building in San Diego,
California September 1, 2015. REUTERS/Mike Blake
NBC News is not the first news outlet to launch a digital video
service. In 2015, CNN launched "Great Big Story," which has 128
million multi-platform video views every month, according to CNN.
The average viewer is 28.
Unlike TV, where NBC News competes with other broadcasters, Left
Field will go head-to-head with all news organizations on social
media, which include newspapers, start-ups and cable networks.
"NBC recognizes that news organizations need to innovate and
experiment and it's very hard to do inside their traditional
formats," said Andrew Heyward, the former head of CBS News and a
visiting researcher at MIT Media Lab. "The challenge is to figure
out ways to create distinctive value."
(Reporting by Jessica Toonkel; Editing by Dan Grebler)
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