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IDEAS, EXAMPLES AND RESOURCES FOR THE COVERAGE OF THE CORONA CRISIS.



The good coverage of the corona situation



NEWS JOURNALISM



What is the status? Of course, this is the first question that journalism must answer. How many are infected, how does it develop, etc.



INVESTIGATIVE JOURNALISM



Ask the difficult question, be critical of the information you receive. But be critical when it's relevant - not just to appear critical at a press conference.



CONSTRUCTIVE JOURNALISM



Facilitate conversations that bring solutions. Look for the possible solutions. Remember that this type of journalism presupposes the other two; news journalism and investigative journalism.



STEP and Corona



SOLUTIONS



Focus on how you can inspire with your journalism. Examine how people are handeling the problems, you are covering elsewhere. Tell the stories about how others have succeeded. Show how to help each other. People want to help!



TRUST



By acting critically and constructively, you can support the confidence of the institutions that guide us through the crisis. Ask the critical question when appropriate. But avoid casting doubt and creating uncertainty if not needed.



ENGAGEMENT



Involve those you create journalism for. Ask for their questions, listen to their thoughts, and find out how you can help them the best.



PERSPECTIVES



Be careful not to frighten - and at the same time, be careful not to downplay the danger. Make sure you keep the nuances when you communicate. Show the broader perspectives.



RESOURCE SITES



CONSTRUCTIVE INSTITUTE



Collects good examples on how you can make your journalistic coverage more constructive.


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POYNTER



Poynter makes a daily newsletter with good examples and tips on how to cover the crisis.


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REFRAME



An American newsletter that daily gathers good advice to local media on how they should cover the crisis.


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FACTS



At John Hopkins University, they gather facts about COVID-19 in real-time in an interactive dashboard. They release a blog as well about the development.


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GOOD EXAMPLES ON COVERAGE OF THE CORONA CRISIS





NEW YORK TIMES





New York Times releases an E-book that is free to download for everyone. The little books answer through 162 pages questions like; How does it infect, how should I clean my phone, how should I speak with my child about it, how should I look after my old parents, etc.



Fyens Stftstidende





Fyens Stiftstidende has launched a campaign that encourages to support the local commercial life. A clear example of how, as a media, you can take on the role as someone that tries to help the local community when it is needed.



NRK





NKR explains how the local community encourages when the hospital asks for help. The story contains specific facts about how many have been infected, how big the problem is right now, etc.



BBC





BBC describes how one looks out for their mental health when a crisis is happening. Specific and accessible advice.



ZETLAND





Zetland already thinks in the start of the pandemic onward. What will this mean in the long run? It strengthens the perspective and gives the feeling that this will leave more than reminiscences of a crisis.



DR





DR helps people get answers to their questions. They gather answers from relevant professionals.



THE GUARDIAN





The Guardian explains how a vaccine is getting created and how long it's taking. They are looking onward and look after solutions instead of just focusing on the problem.



IRISH DAILY MAIL





Irish Daily Mail chose to release a front page that looked onwards instead of just reporting on the current crisis. The coverage explains the situation, presents facts, but it also shows how everyone can save lives.



NEW YORK TIMES





New York Times writes about how life in the city is affected by the crisis. It takes the perspective back to earlier emergencies like the 2. world war, the black death in the middle ages and the 9/11 terrorist attack. The overall point is that we should figure it out - together.



GALILEO





The german tv-program Galileo focused on being "helpful" with their corona-coverage. The story is an example of how they succeeded in covering a frighting development but also creating hope in the process.


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SVT





SVT gathers experts answers to questions about corona. The coverage involves and engages the watchers.


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TV2FYN





The local Funen tv-station TV2Fyn decided from the start of the crisis to devote a great deal of editorial staff to work goal-oriented at answering the citizens on Fyns questions. Several articles have been published since then - all with the heading: A citizen from Funen gets answers.


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SIX ways a regional mediahouse made new connections with its users during Covid-19



Nobody can meet, the reporters are working from home, all the interviews are done over the phone and nothing is as planned. But at Fyens Stiftstidende, a regional mediahouse in Denmark, the lockdown has led to new levels of audience engagement. Ways that will continue after society opens again.



Engaging your audience in a constructive manner is the core of the future of journalism - and especially for the local media. During this time with a lockdown in big parts of our society, the local media are hit very hard on the economy, because the economy still is based on ads. And as the ads are some of the spendings that are downsized first, it hits the local media hard. Layoffs and even shutting down media businesses are happening all over the world these days. In order to stay alive to be able to inform, help and connect societies, the media businesses must find new ways to be meaningful in their societies. Creating connections by engaging your audience in a constructive way is one very powerful way for a media to become meaningful. Here are six examples of how the danish regional mediahouse Fyens Stiftstidende became relevant to their readers by working to engage in a constructive way.



1. Help the local businesses



One of the first reactions to the situation was to take care of eachother in the local communities, and when the local businesses started hurting, the newspaper made a helpline, where the local business-owners could get help for free. The newspaper collected all the questions, and connected with lawyers, doctors and accountants to get answers for the local business community. More than xx send their questions to the local media, and in that way Fyens Stifstidende listened and helped the local community.


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2. Help the readers help their local shops



But the real pain for most of the local shop-owners was of course the fewer customers and the decline in revenue. Instead of just listening to - and telling all the sad stories of what went wrong, the newspaper decided to act. A new journalistic campaign was created. And after only three weeks more than 1880 local citizens had been part of the campaign - helping the local businesses. The readers participated by telling why they use their local shop, and the newspaper gives back by making a lottery, where one of the stories are being chosen every day, and the person who has written it gets a giftcard to the local shops. The editor in chief writes; “We are not asking you to buy more than you normally do - but to shop as normal and local as you can.” The campaign was named “Appreciate your town”


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3. Digital readers editorial meeting



Normally the mediahouse invites its readers to reader meetings almost every week. But during this lock down-period that is of course not possible. Instead some of the meetings are going digital. One example is when a local newsdesk invited to a readers editorial meeting, where the readers could tell the reporters, what stories they would want in the newspaper, and what questions, they needed answers to. Almost 200 people participated in that first digital editorial meeting, and almost 5000 have seen it after it was live. It was transmitted over facebook-live, and the comments are filled with good questions, the newsroom now are working to find answers to.


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4. Help your local community help itself



In a local community people depend on each other. In the good times and in the bad. In the town Faaborg, the local news desk decided to use that in order to help everybody get through this rough period. The journalistic campaign “Faaborg helps Faaborg” was created. The local weekly teamed up with a local competitor and made the campaign something that everybody in the community could share. The campaign includes an online show with local celebrities, a t-shirt with a local slogan and a lot of other ideas. All the money that are being collected are either going to a town festival or to a fund where the local business can get help. That decision is made by the local citizens who are voting to decide, where the money goes.


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5. Remember to listen to the young people



The young people are often left out of the conversation in the newsmedia. That was also happening during the beginning of the corona-coverage. But the newspaper decided to listen to the young people and help them get their voice heard. The newspaper created a partnership with a danish museum of communication; Enigma and decided to collect stories about what the young people felt, the lockdown meant to their feeling of belonging in a community. The museum is gathering all the stories and is making an exhibition when the lockdown is over. To get the stories, the newspaper connected with the local highschools, where the teachers helped get the stories from their students. The stories are articles, podcasts and video, and they are being published by the local media during the lockdown to get the young voices heard.


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6. Listen louder



During the period with Corona - the journalists at Fyens Stiftstidende used a lot of different ways to reach out to their audience. One of them is through the audience engagement tool Hearken. Hearken helps the journalists listen to the audience in a structured way. With an embed under each article the journalists ask the readers what they want to read about - and then they can answer questions and at the same time make more relevant journalism. The numbers show that the articles that are made based on Hearken-questions get more views and time spend pr article.


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Room of Solutions
Gerd Maria May
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| +45 2464 2516 | Gerdmay@gmail.com



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