Posted by Greg Sandoval 
http://news.cnet.com/8301-10784_3-9979485-7.html?tag=nefd.top

Alec Baldwin, Lindsay Lohan, and Kramer from Seinfeld may despise TMZ.com, but 
that hasn't stopped the celebrity news site from bagging more blockbuster 
scoops the past two years than any competitor. 

TMZ's growing reputation as Hollywood's in-the-know and in-your-face news 
agency was built by working the phones, developing sources and basically out 
hustling rivals, say executives. What isn't well-known, however, is that the 
company may also possess a technology edge. 

TMZ, which launched as a Web site in 2005 and moved into TV last September, is 
among the first to build a tapeless, high-definition TV newsroom from the 
ground up, according to managers. 

Other newsrooms have migrated from videotape to digital, but TMZ, perhaps 
best-known for its reporting on Seinfeld star Michael Richards' racist tirade, 
was designed for the Digital Age. Not only does this enable TMZ cameramen to 
shoot using lighter, less expensive cameras, but editors don't have to rip up 
entire TV shows each time they make changes, says Jim Paratore, TMZ's executive 
producer. 

For these reasons, TMZ often has stories up before rivals and operates more 
efficiently, executives say. As chilling as this may sound to some, TMZ could 
be the prototype of a 21st century news agency. 

"The business has changed, and the business model of these shows has to 
change," Paratore said. "You have to figure out how to do these shows more 
efficiently...We had the opportunity to marry technology with the way we 
produced the show and create a model that fit the revenue available today." 

Technology, in a way, gave birth to TMZ. 

The founders recognized distributing news over the Web meant they could post 
stories, photos, and videos of drunken starlets or brawling actors almost as 
soon as they obtained them. 

TV shows like Entertainment Tonight and Access Hollywood, on the other hand, 
had to wait until their shows aired. People magazine had to wait until the next 
issue hit newsstands. 

Sure, TMZ's clips weren't as slick looking as those broadcast by some of its 
rivals. But managers discovered that the audience liked it better that way, 
Paratore said. For example, the now-famous clip of Paris Hilton and friend 
Brandon Davis disparaging part of Lindsay Lohan's anatomy while leaving a 
nightclub, isn't great photography. The footage is grainy and dark. 

Yet, the clip of a catty Hilton was viewed more than 2.5 million times and 
marked TMZ as a player in the Hollywood-gossip industry. Producing video for 
the Web taught TMZ managers an important lesson: People want unfiltered 
information about celebrities. Pretty images and clever editing are less 
important. 

"What has changed because of the Web is the whole expectation of what TV is," 
Paratore said. "People just want to see raw video. They don't want it all 
beautified and packaged, particularly entertainment news because they think 
it's all B.S." 

After learning that, Paratore and Harvey Levin, TMZ's managing editor, made 
plans for their tapeless newsroom. 

For help, they went to Warner Bros. and its emerging-technology unit. The group 
focused on designing a low-cost system geared for speed and simplicity. 

Engineers opted for off-the-shelf hardware--such as a 32-terabyte storage area 
network (SAN) from Hewlett-Packard and a bunch of 8-core Mac Pros for 
editing--rather than spending money on expensive production tools designed for 
the broadcast industry, said Spencer Stephens, vice president of product 
technology for the Warner Bros. group. 

"It's the same sort of hardware that a financial institution or anybody else 
using a large 32-terabyte SAN might use," Stephens said. "More traditionally, 
we would have gone out and chosen something specifically designed for this 
marketplace, but because this is a relatively small market it would have cost 
more to get it up and running." 

Translation: TMZ had less money to spend and that forced it to be more 
resourceful. 

Perfect. The company regularly competes against deeper-pocketed network shows, 
and loves to see itself as a giant killer, Paratore said. If less money meant 
TMZ had to squeeze more traffic and TV ratings out of fewer resources, so be 
it. Instead of buying the bulky $30,000 shoulder-held cameras favored by many 
broadcasters, TMZ settled on the $5,000 Sony Z1U, an HD handheld cam. 

The Z1U is a half step from being a consumer product, but managers found that 
the camera fit with their guerrilla-journalism style. 

We've all seen those scenes of reporters, photographers and cameramen swarming 
around stars outside courtrooms or nightclubs. The Z1U is much easier to handle 
in these situations than a larger camera. 

Another benefit of a smaller camera is it allows TMZ's shooters to be less 
intimidating when approaching celebrities. 

"You can't go around with big cameras, a sound guy, and a multiple-person 
crew," Paratore said. "You need a smaller footprint. It's all about being a fly 
on the wall." 

Going digital also streamlined editing and content management, which is vital 
for breaking-news stories. 

The system Warner Bros. came up with enables producers to see raw footage, make 
rough cuts from their desktop, and then assemble timelines for the show as they 
write their scripts. The system gives producers precious extra minutes to 
complete work on a story segment. 

Traditionally, the segments of a TV news show were combined and assembled onto 
a tape, Stephens said. The show had to be completely finished by the time it 
started broadcasting. It wasn't possible to change anything once the show 
started being aired, he said. 

"Now, we're editing individual stories and plugging segments into a video 
server," Stephens said. "It's very similar if you got an iTunes playlist. You 
can start the music, but you can also push new pieces into the playlist on the 
fly. Rather than having to have my story finished a half hour before the whole 
show airs, now I actually need to finish a couple of minutes before my 
particular segment of the show airs." 

This kind of flexibility is handy when your top news subjects can get busted 
for a DUI day or night.

Gregory S. Williams
AOL IC/SAP Help Desk
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
 
 

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