Study Mobile Journalism with me in Berlin! I have partnered with AirBnB to organize the booking of private and semi-private training workshops in the heart of Berlin Mitte. View On Airbnb Most trainees spend a few days in Berlin and they film several projects and study with me during that time. We split our time […]
Storylab seminars in Mobile Journalism
A StoryLab combines a design-thinking workshop with Mobile Journalism immersion story production to create enriched storytelling experiences with university students. I have produced story labs with the University of Stockholm, Michigan State University, Danish School of Journalism, and EFJ News school of Journalism, Paris. In the Storylab format, students get the guidance to produce high […]
17 tips for getting hired as a Mojo – Mobile Journalist
My Italian colleague Francesco Facchini recently posted a tweet about how to make money as a mojo. It is an excellent question and I want to share 17 tips for making it as a MOJO. Many of my clients have Mojo teams in their newsrooms and often Mojo is a core skill now for many […]
MOJO textbook now available in German
MOJO textbook now available in German A German publisher has licensed and translated “Smartphone Video Storytelling” for the German market. You can grab your copy at Dussmanns!
LumaFusion 2 – Airplay larger preview to external monitor
With LumaFusion 2.0, you can see a larger scale preview of your movie by wirelessly using the Airplay and screen mirror feature of your iOS device. Here’s how. Enable Screen mirroring on your iPhone from the home screen settings pane. 2. Select your Apple TV device that is attached to your external monitor. 3. In […]
10 new features in Lumafusion 2 app for iOS
Here is a tour of the top features in Lumafusion 2.0 More tutorials in the LumaFusion 2 video editing certificate course. https://smartfilmschool.newzenler.com/courses/lumafusion-course
Vertical and horizontal video from one mobile journalism shoot
Watch this vertical video on your phone. And now watch this version on your desktop computer or home TV. They both show the same shots and have exactly the same script. What do you notice about how the filming and editing was done?




