Michael Rosenblum

Michael Rosenblum (born 1954) is a television producer, video journalist (VJ) who built the first major VJ-driven local TV news operation at NY1. He later went on to train VJs at Voice of America, The New York Times, the BBC,[1] News10, McGraw Hill, German Public TV, Dutch Public TV and many other VJ-driven news operations around the world.[2] He was both the founder and first president of New York Times Television.[3]

Michael Rosenblum
Born1954 (age 6566)
Occupation

Rosenblum has produced a number of television shows, including: 5 Takes: Latin America (2007), What's Your Trip (2007), Let the Good Times Roll Again (2007), 5 Takes: USA (2006), Turning the Tide: Tsunami Volunteers (2005), Trauma: Life in the ER, Paramedics, Police Force, Labor and Delivery, and Science Times.

Rosenblum was part of the foundation of Current TV and the Travel Channel Academy.[4] "he has developed a unique and radical vision for television news based on the concept of the "video journalist".[5]

He is the CEO[6] of RosenblumTV, a production company focused on VJ model programming and video boot camps for aspiring VJs, as well as the Travel Channel Academy, NYVS (an online film school), and the Brussels-based Rosenblum Institute. He launched outwildtv.com, a new network modeled on National Geographic.[7]

He is the author of iPhone Millionaire: How to Create and Sell Cutting-Edge Video (2012) and Videojournalismus (2003).

Education

Rosenblum is a 1972 graduate of Lawrence High School, New York[8] and a 1976 graduate of Williams College.

Publications

  • iPhone Millionaire: How to Create and Sell Cutting-Edge Video. McGraw Hill, 2012. ISBN 978-0071800174.
  • Videojournalismus:: Die digitale Revolution. 2003. ISBN 978-3937151106. German.
gollark: Pick a random number with more zeroes than usual?
gollark: https://www.theregister.com/2019/03/05/ai_gaydar/ (headline is vaguely misleading)
gollark: I blatantly stole it from helloboi.
gollark: I may be referred to as car/cdr if desired.
gollark: The problem with spaces is that you can’t actually see them. So you can’t be sure they’re correct. Also they aren’t actually there anyway - they are the absence of code. “Anti-code” if you will. Too many developers format their code “to make it more maintainable” (like that’s actually a thing), but they’re really just filling the document with spaces. And it’s impossible to know how spaces will effect your code, because if you can’t see them, then you can’t read them. Real code wizards know to just write one long line and pack it in tight. What’s that you say? You wrote 600 lines of code today? Well I wrote one, and it took all week, but it’s the best. And when I hand this project over to you next month I’ll have solved world peace in just 14 lines and you will be so lucky to have my code on your screen <ninja chop>.

References

  1. Rosenblum, Michael (29 March 2014). "iPhone Journalism". The Huffington Post. Retrieved 14 November 2016.
  2. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2011-09-16. Retrieved 2010-05-31.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  3. "Q&A Interview with Michael Rosenblum". C-Span. Retrieved 31 May 2010.
  4. Clark, Jayne (24 April 2009). "Travel Channel offers a video 'boot camp' for aspiring journalists". USA Today. Retrieved 31 May 2010.
  5. Warley, Stephen (2002-09-17). "Democratizing TV: The BBC". TV Spy. Archived from the original on 19 January 2007. Retrieved 31 May 2010.
  6. "Video Bootcamp". HowTo.gov. May 24, 2011. Archived from the original on June 13, 2013. Retrieved 2013-09-30.
  7. Batiwalla, Nevin (July 20, 2012). "Billionaire backs Franklin tech startup OutwildTV". Nashville Business Journal.
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