Live Streaming Shopping in China (Video News in 60 Seconds)

Posted April 11, 2018
Share To
 
 

Today's Video News in 60 Seconds: A new live streaming network in China called Shop Shops is like QVC on steroids, AND Tenga is sourcing news from Snapchat.
 
Learn the skills you need to launch a career in video and make some serious cash with a 10-day free trial with TheVJ.com.
 
Every day, TheVJ.com looks at the most important news events and trends related to the world of video and television and compresses it to a 60-second report. 

The world of video is changing fast. Cable channels are scrambling to compete with online video; online video is becoming a serious player in the world of television; 70% of online traffic is now video; Facebook, Instagram, YouTube, Twitter, SnapChat and just about everyone else are moving to video, and in the process presenting entirely new ways to make money with your video. Meanwhile, smartphone and iPhone video are rapidly displacing conventional DSLR and video cameras as the best way to shoot professional quality video, at the lowest cost. 

  • If you want to have a career in video.  
  • If you want to learn how to make money with your video. 
  • If you want to become a professional video producer.
  • If you want to make money with your YouTube Channel
  • If you want to start your own TV network

You HAVE to stay informed on the latest in video technology, new editing software, the global video marketplace, new online video platforms, who is paying for video, what are platforms like Facebook Watch or YouTube Red looking for, and so much more.

There is only one place that combines all this information and presents it in a neat, tight, easy and fun to watch package – TheVJ.com’s All The Video News You Need In 60 Seconds.  

Available on FacebookInstagramTwitter, our YouTube Channel, and of course, at www.TheVJ.com.

 


Recent Posts

There is a great deal of concern, well placed, that few people under the age of 30 watch TV news. Viewership of TV news in general has fallen off, so naturally, TV executives across the boards are searching for a solution. How to appeal to a demographic that spends most of their time on social media?


Sometimes when you are searching for something, the answer is right before your eyes. For years, I have been looking for a new and powerful way to cover breaking news stories - and now, I think, I've got it.


When we run our video storytelling bootcamps for TV news organizations, our primary focus is on what we call ‘the viewer experience’. It is a given that the journalism is well researched and accurate, but if no one is watching; if there is no ‘audience engagement’ with the story, then you are in fact showing it to no one, which is tragic, and avoidable.


Share Page on: