Video at Eleven

As media bureaus retrench, digital videographer Jason Maloney ’91 steps in to deliver news from the world’s hot spots.

When Russia invaded Georgia last August news producer Jason Maloney was already in the mountainous former Soviet republic. “We interviewed the president of Georgia about 24 hours before the Russians came down the tunnel,” says Maloney, co-founder of the nonprofit Bureau for International Reporting (BIR). “We were there to do the looming conflict story, and the conflict broke out right in front of us.”

Maloney often breaks stories as one of the few American videojournalists covering international news. He and journalist Kira Kay founded BIR in 2006 to supply American television outlets with foreign stories in the wake of widespread global news bureau closings. Based in New York City, much of the pair’s work is done for PBS’ NewsHour and NOW as well as for HDNet’s World Report. Their longer, newsmagazine-length pieces are also available on YouTube and iTunes.

“We chip away at stories we feel are being overlooked,” Maloney says. “We got 60 Minutes to go to Darfur to do the first real report on that conflict. We crossed the border illegally from Chad and spent two or three days driving around. I was filming rebel groups, a mass grave, things that had never been shot before. Then our driver got completely lost in the desert. Luckily I had a GPS with some waypoints that helped us get out of Darfur, and we never encountered the Sudan army or the Janjaweed. But it was dicey.”

A government major and film studies minor—“the closest thing to a journalism degree that Dartmouth offered,” he says—Maloney gained extensive production experience from summer internships. But he “drifted away” from the news business to earn a master’s in international relations from the London School of Economics. What lured him back was the trial of the century—ABC News desperately needed production staff to cover the O.J. Simpson story. Afterward Maloney joined ABC’s Primetime Live in 1996 where he racked up production awards for five years before embarking on a freelance career.

Maloney and Kay produce four to five stories a year on an annual operating budget of about $225,000, some of which is covered by grants from the Ford Foundation and Carnegie Corp. And while demand for their stories is increasing, budgets are shrinking, so there’s been no change in their bottom line. “The normal economic model of supply and demand isn’t necessarily at play here,” Maloney says. “NewsHour would love more of our stories, but they’re not able to pay any more.”

Although he occasionally does voiceover reporting, as he did for a piece on Islam in Russia in the Republic of Tatarstan, Kay handles the bulk of these duties while Maloney focuses on shooting the stories with his “workhorse,” a Sony FX-1 high-definition digital video camera. He still records to tape because memory cards aren’t practical for the remote locations in which he and Kay shoot. “We just came back from doing a story on U.N. peacekeeping in Congo with 40 hours of tape from the field. I’d shoot six or seven hours a day, and with memory cards you need to download to a computer every couple of hours. We can’t be assured that we’ll have the ability or the power to do that,” he says.

In addition to his work as a videojournalist, Maloney co-authored Your America: Democracy’s Local Heroes, published last summer by Palgrave Macmillan. Written with John Siceloff, creator and executive producer of NOW, the book features interviews with 12 “heroes” who’ve impacted their local communities. “The book project was a wonderful antidote since I had just come off doing stories about the Khmer Rouge in Cambodia and the Lord’s Resistance Army abducting kids in northern Uganda, some of the darkest stuff I ever heard,” says Maloney, who last spring won a second Robert F. Kennedy Memorial Journalism Award for the Uganda story. “It’s hard to hear all this stuff out in the field. But knowing we can get these kinds of stories out and that they might raise awareness certainly helps compensate for how tough this job can be.”

 

Bonnie Barber is a frequent contributor to DAM.

 

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