Western iMedia logo square (squared off) 4x4-300

Experiential news media are the new mainstream as far as millennial participants are concerned. These tend to be entrepreneurial activities with startup-style collaboration bearing little resemblance to traditional, pre-packaged editorial operations in terms of workflow, organization or product. Instead, they comprise small, multi-skilled, multi-tasking groups that create together very much like a band of musicians making music.
It’s not so much their instruments, or technologies, that differentiate them as it is how they use them in novel ways that come to be recognized as their particular style. It is that style as much as their story that attracts their community. Because for millennials today, media is a lifestyle choice, like the music you choose to listen to.

Read the full piece at WKU News
For more on the concept, see WAN-IFRA
For more background, visit westernimedia.com


They are the journalistic equivalent of a rock band. Each is an artist with certain instruments from the orchestra of millennial media. Performing together as Western iMedia, they create a uniquely experiential style of story that engages millions of people.
And now they are taking their show on the road to London, England.
The fusion journalists of Western iMedia, a millennial news startup embedded in Western Kentucky University’s School of Journalism & Broadcasting, have received a $10,000 commission from the International NewsMedia Association to design and perform coverage of INMA’s 2016 World Congress in May.
INMA’s annual World Congress is essentially the Davos of media. It brings together some 500 top editorial business leaders, policymakers, digital innovators, selected intellectuals, and journalists to discuss the most pressing issues facing the world’s news and media environment.
This will be the sixth consecutive year that INMA has called on WiM’s innovative storytelling techniques to connect what happens at its congress to the wider interest in these issues worldwide.
In 2015, working out of The New York Times building for three days, this elite band of WKU students reached 3.4 million people and achieved exposure of 22.8 million with their multifaceted online and mobile news production. It combined a series of code-enhanced narratives, journalistic adaptations of some common social-networking apps, and more than 50 custom-designed photo/video/audio amalgamations.
“Western iMedia rocks! Nice work!” That was the reaction of INMA Senior Editor Dawn McMullan, apparently a fan of the band.
See more on the 2016 INMA World Congress

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