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    AOL's Huff Post to launch live streaming network

    NEW YORK (AP) — AOL and the Huffington Post are launching a live video network that aims to combine broadcast news with social media.

    The Huffington Post Streaming Network was previewed Thursday at AOL's Manhattan headquarters. The online network will launch this summer, streaming news video live 12 hours a day on weekdays, expanding to 16 hours a day next year.

    The Huffington Post, which AOL purchased for $315 million a year ago, is dedicating 100 employees to the project. It will be webcast from studios in New York and Los Angeles, as well a satellite studio in Washington.

    Huffington Post founding editor Roy Sekoff, who will head the network, declined to say how much AOL is spending, but called it a "substantial investment." He likened the network to a "never-ending talk show" that will "mirror the Internet experience."

    On Wednesday, AOL Inc. reported sharply lower fourth-quarter net income, but a rise of 10 percent in ad revenue. In shifting from the obsolete business of dial-up Internet to a contemporary media company, AOL has sought to invest in the content business, a philosophy AOL CEO Tim Armstrong reiterated Thursday.

    Armstrong called the launching of the HPSN, as the network is referred to in short, to a bigger "bet" for AOL than its purchase of the Huffington Post. He called the network "a game-changing type idea."

    Arianna Huffington, head of the Huffington Post Media Group, seconded that hyperbole, calling the network "truly groundbreaking."

    Other digital media outlets have turned to live video to expand beyond text reporting. Most notably, The Wall Street Journal launched its first live online program in 2008 and is currently producing about four hours of live video on weekdays for WSJ.com.

    Sekoff called the WSJ project "fine" but said the much-commenting Huffington Post community will differentiate its network.

    "No offense to the Wall Street Journal, but I think we got more comments this month than the Wall Street Journal got last year," said Sekoff.

    The Journal declined to comment.

    As previewed, HPSN will rely heavily on interaction with its viewers. A computer screen of the network will have about a third of its picture dedicated to community, Facebook and Twitter commenting. Reports and interviews will be interrupted with news read off of social media, and commenters will also be invited to be guests via Skype. A clickable banner of headlines will scroll across the bottom of the screen.

    "People don't want to have you tell them the news anymore," said Sekoff. "They don't want to be talked to, they want to be talked with."

    AOL said it's currently reaching out to advertisers that it will sell pre-roll ads for its on-demand videos, on-screen graphics and integrated sponsorship in news segments. One demo showed a feature on the experience of driving a Lexus.

    The network won't have time-scheduled programs, but overlap topics to reflect the "controlled chaos" of the Web, said Sekoff. He hopes the network will produce 30,000 clips in its first year.

    The network will draw its reporting from the Huffington Post's newsroom, as well as those of other AOL properties, including Patch, Techcrunch and Engadget. It also plans to launch on devices that connect to TVs, like Roku and PlayStation sets.

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    http://www.huffingtonpost.com

     

    12 comments

    • Dave  •  3 months ago
      I hope they speak better English than Arianna.
      • Bill M. 3 months ago
        She sounds like Zsa Zsa Gabor.
    • Nony  •  3 months ago
      ...and I would watch, why?
    • Steven  •  Portland, United States  •  3 months ago
      HuffPo used to be a fun site to post on. Now there's widespread censorship of any comments against the authors, against Arianna Huffington or the site itself. Most of the science and entertainment "news" are really just info style advertisements and finally, the site is bloated. It's slow and buggy because every time you open a page multiple javascripts open and consume your resources. You could have a Core 5 chip and all the processors would be gobbled up by a stupid news article. HuffPo and Arianna really suck it.
    • Awoke2Thunder  •  3 months ago
      That means her immensely annoying English mangling Euro trash accent will be pouring out of headphones,ear buds & external speakers.
      • CarolF 3 months ago
        Not mine, wouldn't watch if they paid me.
    • Bill M.  •  Pompano Beach, United States  •  3 months ago
      Ariana Huffington is a 1%er who wont pay bloggers for their contributions to her hefty bank account.
      • Happy 3 months ago
        THERE'S NOTHING WRONG WITH HAVING MORE MONEY THEN OTHERS. Come on people they earned it and just because you're to lazy to get off your #$%$ doesn't make them bad people.
    • Old 'Burgher  •  Sacramento, United States  •  3 months ago
      Oh God. I hope to hell they don't put any of those witless, no-talent teenage girls on as their on-camera "personalities." I'd rather have 5 root canals on the same day.
    • GG  •  3 months ago
      a live "steaming" network is more fitting for such a pile of offal.
    • happy toberight  •  3 months ago
      huffington sucks
    • A Yahoo! User  •  3 months ago
      HuffPo sold out, and the negative effects can already been seen. Their Entertainment section secretly re-directs users to AOL's MovieFone site, and none of the links back to HuffPo work. Their Health section does the same thing. And the quality of the content has gone down too, as the site has started to become something of a corporate apologist and mouthpiece for business interests. We need a new progressive aggregate site that's not controlled by someone willing to compromise her principles for a few million dollars.
      • Steven 3 months ago
        We should have mentioned the Tech section is nothing but one long info-advertisement for Apple. Also the authors fail to reveal their financial interest in the companies and products they write about. It's very unethical.
      • Raleigh 3 months ago
        On the other hand, the News and Political coverage are as liberal and biased as ever.
      • CarolF 3 months ago
        Plus, hardly any of their articles are proofread and have tons of mistakes, most of the time the article isn't even what the headline says. If you comment anything bad about Obama or liberals most of the time you get censored.
    • A Yahoo! User  •  3 months ago
      Huffington Post - where if you post anything that doesn't meet prima donna Huffington's approval, she acts like China Internet and censors you. She ain't no Facebook and this move looks like wishful thinking to cash in on social media boom. Of course, if you treat your employees like hired servants that are beneath you, maybe you can eek a profit.
    • Happy  •  3 months ago
      They are hoping to replace the Liberal Air America Network that failed. Sorry Liberalism is a disease and America has found a cure.
    • Bonnie  •  San Diego, United States  •  3 months ago
      Who's going to watch???

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