Forum Communications Co. taking newsgathering to new heights

Jim Manney (left), Forum Communications video manager, and Chris Dorsey, Forum Communications director of multimedia accounts and digital advertising, show the quadcopter, a remote-control aircraft, or drone, that was used for fly-over flood coverage. Photo by Rylee Nelson

By Rylee Nelson
Forum News Service

FARGO, N.D. – Forum Communications Co. has enlisted new aerial perspectives to provide its readers and viewers with over-the-top coverage of the 2013 Red River Valley flood.
Fly-over video captured by way of a remote-control aircraft, or drone, shows the swelling river from a unique angle. This unique approach to reporting the big story is now catching national attention.
In the past few years, high-definition, durable cameras have become increasingly available. And while the use of drones has been somewhat controversial in fields such as law enforcement, the devices are being used in a variety of ways — by outdoorsmen, extreme sports enthusiasts, and in this case, by news gatherers.
Chris Dorsey, director of multimedia accounts and digital advertising for Forum Communications, has been flying his quadcopter, mounted with a GoPro, high-definition video camera, to provide a unique view of the flooding. The idea began from a personal interest of Dorsey’s to simply fly remote-control aircraft. From there, he and Jim Manney, Forum Communications video manager, put together a plan to use the aerial machine for video on InforumTV.com, a video-focused news website owned by Forum Communications.
“The whole idea stems from the idea to take our viewers to a place they have never been. A place they couldn’t go,” Manney said.

Jim Manney (left), Forum Communications video manager, and Chris Dorsey, Forum Communications director of multimedia accounts and digital advertising, demonstrate the quadcopter, a remote-control aircraft, or drone, that was used for fly-over flood coverage. Photo by Rylee Nelson

The rather small idea has gained big attention from national audiences this week. Even the Weather Channel commented on how neat the idea was, Dorsey noted. Several national media outlets have contacted Dorsey and Manney to use the video in their own broadcasts.
For Dorsey and Manney, it’s a matter how far they can go to bringing new and unique perspectives to viewers.
“Video is such a huge part of where we are going … it is information for the public. This is evident in our investment in InforumTV,” Dorsey said, noting that the quadcopter may be used for other story coverage in the future, such as the Fargo Marathon or even a RedHawks baseball game.
Still, Dorsey and Manney say they are well aware of their boundaries when it comes to the use of the personal aircraft. To begin flying the device, they had to be in contact with the FAA to make sure they were following drone law. They also say they want to respect people’s privacy. You won’t find them flying over anyone’s fence.
Video of the Red River flooding is available on www.inforumtv.com.

Rylee Nelson is a Forum News Service reporter stationed in Fargo. He can be reached at rnelson@forumcomm.com.

InforumTV.com is owned by Forum Communications Co. Forum Communications is a multimedia information company based in Fargo, and owns dozens of newspapers, websites and television and radio stations in North Dakota, South Dakota, Minnesota and Wisconsin.

Forum Communications Co. debuts video-only website InforumTV

Robin Huebner goes through a test run of an InforumTV webcast in the video studio of The Forum building in Fargo. InforumTV launched today at InforumTV.com. Photo by J. Shane Mercer / The Forum of Fargo-Moorhead

By Shane Mercer
FARGO, N.D. – The Forum of Fargo-Moorhead and WDAY-TV and radio today launched the InforumTV website with three live morning news webcasts anchored by Robin Huebner.
Plans are to eventually offer top-of-the-hour updates throughout the workday.
Huebner’s webcasts will air at 9, 10 and 11 a.m. Monday through Friday on Inforumtv.com. The site will also have the capacity to deliver news live from the field.
InforumTV will be a separate site from The Forum’s Inforum.com website, and focuses strictly on video.
There are plans to develop a morning show for InforumTV, said media manager Jim Manney, who heads up the video department at The Forum.
Manney said InforumTV will also produce and webcast live talk shows in the future.
“It’s a place for us to deliver news, information and entertainment to readers, viewers and listeners,” Manney said.
He has big dreams for the site.
“I can see it becoming, at some point, a 12-hour-a-day network,” Manney said. “It’s very ambitious, I know, but it’s something that I think will definitely happen over the course of the next few years.”
In addition to the live offerings, the site will be home to “the nearly 27,000 videos that Forum Communications Co. has shot,” Manney said.

Multimedia developer Ryan Babb works behind the boards in the video studio at The Forum building. Photo by J. Shane Mercer / The Forum of Fargo-Moorhead

Forum Communications is the parent company of The Forum, WDAY and other media outlets in Minnesota, North Dakota, South Dakota and Wisconsin. New video from these various outlets will be added to InforumTV’s searchable archive as it is created.
“What we want people to do is explore; to jump on the website and search the stories that they’re interested in,” Manney said. “And we want you to kind of get lost and explore and have some fun and see what we have available.”
WDAY News Director Jeff Nelson said the site will enhance what WDAY.com is already doing.
InforumTV is going to allow us another avenue to get those stories out to people,” said Nelson, who described it as “an opportunity for Forum Communications as a company to really go out and be everywhere with everybody.”
While The Forum has already been producing video for the Web, Forum Editor Matthew Von Pinnon believes the InforumTV venture marks a new emphasis on video newsgathering for the staff.
“If there’s a news event happening, we’ll bring it to people, and we’ll stream it, and we’ll show it,” he said. “It could be a press conference; it could be breaking news, fires, weather, whatever. We can be out in the field and sharing that information with people in real time.”

Bill Marcil Jr. publisher of The Forum of Fargo-Moorhead

Forum Publisher Bill Marcil Jr. sees InforumTV as a “big part” of the company’s future.
“We will still provide the very best platform for news and advertising with Inforum, but by separating the two, we will have a better user experience for the person that just wants video,” he said.
“We will provide not only news updates but local news stories, weather and original content with the ability to go live any time of the day or night,” Marcil said.

Shane Mercer is a reporter at The Forum of Fargo-Moorhead, a Forum Communications Co. newspaper.

The Forum, WDAY-TV and InforumTV are all owned by Forum Communications Co. Forum Communications Co. is a multimedia information company based in Fargo. Forum Communications owns dozens of newspapers, websites and television and radio stations in North Dakota, South Dakota, Minnesota and Wisconsin.

Duluth (Minn.) News Tribune moving production to state-of-the-art press


By Candace Renalls
Duluth News Tribune staff writer
DULUTH, Minn. – As he talked about the Duluth News Tribune’s new state-of-the art press, publisher Ken Browall’s excitement showed.
“For those of us who have been in the business, it’s like a work of art in progress,” said Browall, who started at age 10 with a newspaper route. “You stand there. You’re mesmerized by the beauty of it.”
The News Tribune is moving its production operations from the basement of its downtown Duluth building to a new 35,000-square-foot production center on Airpark Boulevard.

There, the new $2.67 million Goss offset press has been assembled and operating on a limited basis as pressmen learn the new technology. It replaces an old Goss flexo press that’s near the end of its lifespan.
Use of the new press is being phased in. The Sunday comics and Scrapbook sections started being printed there early this month, then shipped downtown and inserted in the rest of the paper. The printing of the News Tribune’s sister papers — the Pine Journal, Lake County News-Chronicle, Duluth Budgeteer News and some shoppers — has been moved there, with the Superior Telegram to follow. Like the News Tribune, all are owned by Forum Communications Co., which had earlier consolidated the area’s printing operations in Duluth.
A steady stream of papers moving from the inserter to the bundler. Photo by Steve Kuchera/Duluth News Tribune“The products we’ve done are looking great,” Browall said of the new press.
Forum Communications is not only footing the bill for the new press; it bought the former Bernick’s Beverages warehouse for $1.6 million to serve as the new production and distribution center. Add to that the costs of moving, additional equipment needed and other associated expenses, and the investment grows to about $6 million.
“Investing locally in a production facility is not what you’re seeing at large newspapers around the country,” said John Hatcher, an assistant journalism professor at the University of Minnesota Duluth. “More and more papers are getting away from daily print editions of their paper. … It’s definitely good news for us Duluthians that they are continuing to invest in this local product.”
The shift to full production of the entire News Tribune on the new press is expected in February, but could begin as early as next week.
The News Tribune’s offices, including news, advertising and circulation, will remain on the second floor of the downtown building at 424 W. First St., which it owns. But it is seeking to lease out the building’s first floor.
GETTING UP AND RUNNING
The original target date for the new press start-up was late September. But that timetable turned out to be too aggressive for all that’s involved, said production director Mike Farmer.
The new press arrived from China in June in eight large pieces. Prep work, assembly and getting it running took six months. That was complicated early on when two of its sections were damaged. Using a forklift, a hired installer was lifting a section when it slipped and hit another section, causing damage to both. The two units were shipped to a Goss facility in New Hampshire, where they were repaired and shipped back.
“Putting it together is the easy part,” Farmer said of the new press. “Then there’s a ton of things that happen that’s crucial.”
Thousands of feet of wiring must be installed. A loop plumbing system for each of the four towers of the press is needed, as well as piping to deliver the ink. Then the pressmen and assemblers need to be trained on the new systems.
The logistics of phasing in a new press in one location while continuing to use an old press in another also is challenging.

Duluth (Minn.) News Tribune Publisher Ken Browall

“It’s a long process from start to finish,” Browall said. “But to have it up and running in a year is pretty good.”
Bill Stafford, who has worked for the News Tribune for 38 years, assembling and bundling the papers after they leave the pressroom, likes the new production center.
“It’s super,” he said. “It’s cooler, it’s quieter. The technology is similar. The big thing is the noise. This machinery is much quieter than the old.”
And for Stafford and the other 40 mailers and pressmen, the investment means more job security.
“The way things are going in the newspaper business, we’re all glad to have this new facility,” he said.
COMMITMENT TO PRINT
The new press and production center is a commitment to the print newspaper in Duluth even as the paper continues to put resources into its online content, newspaper officials say.
“It ensures that the printed product will continue,” Browall said. “It’s a question we always get from readers. This is a sign we believe in the printed paper and that it will be around for years.”
For readers it will mean a paper with sharper and higher-resolution color pictures, and more of them. They’ll also see a slightly smaller page, a cost-saving move happening industry-wide.
For the News Tribune’s bottom line, it means a more efficient press that costs less to run. It’s faster. The old press can print 18,000 copies an hour; the new press can print as many as 30,000. The paper’s current circulation is 35,000 daily and 50,000 on Sundays.
With the new press, the News Tribune can print two products at the same time. A second press — a used one from another Forum newspaper — will be added in about a month, which will boost capacity even further.
“It keeps us competitive,” Browall said. “It’s an opportunity to grow business with commercial printing.”
The Duluth News Tribune already prints the Hermantown Star, UMD Statesman and school and community publications as outside jobs.
“We want more printing jobs,” Browall said. “You have to be competitive, and this one puts us in a position to be more competitive.”
Ken Doctor, a media analyst, said what the News Tribune is doing is “insourcing.” It’s the direction some newspapers are going to maintain their printing product.
“The old idea was every newspaper would have a press and would print its paper every day,” he said. “It might take in other work, it might not.”
Now, newspapers either find another company to print their paper, or they invest in their own production facility and take on additional printing jobs to grow revenue when the press is otherwise idle, he said.
“It’s either, ‘let’s get the maximum use of it or let’s have somebody else doing it,’ ” said Doctor, author of “Newsonomics: Twelve New Trends That Will Shape the News You Get.
The investment in a new press in Duluth comes at a time when not a lot of new presses are being purchased by newspapers. And it comes when more papers are reducing the number of days of their print editions, he said.
That won’t happen in Duluth. With the new press, the print edition will continue seven days a week, Browall promised.

The Forum lauded by newspaper design guru for extraordinary efforts to serve Bison fans in Texas

The 14-page special section on Bison football that The Forum had delivered to thousands of fans in Texas the night before the section inserted into the paper back in Fargo.

FARGO, N.D. – The Forum of Fargo-Moorhead was once again lauded on newspaper design guru Charles Apple’s blog “The Visual Side of Journalism” over the weekend.

In a long post made Sunday, Apple recounts the story of The Forum’s extraordinary efforts to serve readers a thousand miles away the night before a special sports section was to even insert into the paper. On Friday, The Forum printed a 14-page special section that not only inserted in the paper on Saturday, but was also printed in Texas and distributed at a pregame gathering at the stadium Friday night to thousands of North Dakota State University football fans. The Bison were in Frisco, Texas, to play in the NCAA Football Championship Series national title game for the second consecutive year.

Through the words of Forum Assistant Sports Editor Hayden Goethe and Forum Editor Matthew Von Pinnon, Apple recounts the story of the original idea being borne at The Forum’s morning news huddle last Friday, and then follows the story through the next hectic eight hours to make such an aggressive idea come true.

Check out a good read about the extraordinary efforts of a Forum Communications Co. staff trying to serve its readers and advertisers. See Apple’s blog post here.

This is the fourth time in the past year that The Forum’s design efforts have received Apple’s attention on his blog. Apple also praised The Forum for having one of the best five front-page designs in the country on the 100th anniversary of the sinking of the Titanic; another time for The Forum’s unique Page 1 graphic treatment of a tile drainage package; and another time for a Titanic package that rolled out in advance of the anniversary.

The Forum is owned by Forum Communications Co., a multimedia information company based in Fargo. Forum Communications owns dozens of newspapers, websites and television and radio stations in North Dakota, South Dakota, Minnesota and Wisconsin.

Forum Communications Co.’s interactive team releases six updated iPad apps

A screengrab of the updated iPad app for The Forum of Fargo-Moorhead.

FARGO, N.D. – Forum Communications Co. now has available in the Apple store updated iPad news apps for six of its newspaper properties in North Dakota and Minnesota, company officials announced.

The updated iPad apps feature the in-depth news coverage of local newspapers conveniently packaged for busy mobile users, but the new apps also improve a user’s experience by allowing continuous side-to-side scrolling of content, creating a more magazine-like feel to reading and viewing the stories and photos you want from The Forum of Fargo-Moorhead, Grand Forks (N.D.) Herald, Duluth (Minn.) News Tribune, The Jamestown (N.D.) Sun, The Dickinson (N.D.) Press and the Alexandria (Minn.) Echo Press.

You can find the updated apps here: The ForumGrand Forks HeraldDuluth News TribuneThe Jamestown Sun, The Dickinson Press and the Alexandria Echo Press. Or to quickly access all six apps visit here.

.“Readers now will be able to scroll between articles by the simple swipe of a finger,” said FCC Digital Product Development Manager Chris Welle.

In addition, the updated apps include new caption and photo views, rebuilt layouts and new advertising opportunities for those wishing to capitalize on Forum Communications Co.’s mobile content platforms.

Forum Communications Co. iPad apps are updated throughout the day and offer a simple, clean presentation of content from their newspapers’ most popular sections, and the apps also include breaking news and video.

In addition, Welle said, the new updates should give the user increased iPad performance.

“We’ve also significantly optimized the apps performance and reduced the amount of resources it uses on the iPad,” Welle said. “This results in a much smoother and faster experience for our readers.”

The new iPad app demonstrates Forum Communications Co.’s commitment to providing the content on the platforms its users desire.

Forum Communications Co. is a multimedia information company based in Fargo. Forum Communications owns dozens of newspapers, websites and television and radio stations in North Dakota, South Dakota, Minnesota and Wisconsin.