More Things Libraries Can Do With Videoblogs

Posted on July 19, 2006
Filed Under Video Casting, Videoblogging, screencasting |

I’m working on a videoblog presentation I’ll be giving this fall, and discovered this cool list of “common genres” of videoblogs on Wikipedia. Here’s Wikipedia’s list and their definition of each videoblog genre, followed by my ideas for those videoblog genres in a library setting.

Personal
- Vlogs documenting the author’s life, the recounting stories from their past, or the airing of their opinions on various topics.

News - Vlogs covering news events.

Collaborative (also collective or group) - Vlogs with a collaborative nature.

Political - Vlogs discussing political issues.

Environmental - Vlogs discussing environmental issues, nature, and natural history.

Media - Vlogs analyzing television, documentaries and other mass media.

Entertainment - Vlogs producing “shows” or short films.

Third party collections - Vlogs collecting videos from third parties.

Educational - Schools and universities using vlogs as a teaching and creative medium.

Behind the scenes - Vlogs showcasing backstage activities of film production or other arts and skills.

Tutorial - Vlogs offering advice, demonstrations, how-to’s, and tutorials.

Travel - Vlogs serving as a travelogue, exploring different places around the world.

Religious - Vlogs discussing religious topics.

Magazine type or lifestyles - Vlogs discussing lifestyles and hobbies in a television magazine format.

Assignment-based - Vlogs consisting of assignments.

Vlog Anarchy - Vlogs covering all or multiple genres.

So you see, there are many ways a library can use video, RSS, and a little bit of creativity to create a library-based videoblog. Read the Wikipedia article about videoblogging - videoblogging and online video are growing like gangbusters, as more people realize there’s some cool video out there (i.e., they discover YouTube), as more people buy video-ready gadgets (like iPods), and as more people create and share their own videos online.

Your patrons are already discovering other cool online services (blogs, RSS feeds, bookmark managers, Flickr, Instant Messaging, connecting and communicating like they never have before… will your library be ready when a patron asks if you are planning a video feed of library programs?

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