Newsroom Robots

Nikita Roy

Looking to explore the intersection of AI and journalism? Influential thought leaders in the industry join data scientist and media entrepreneur, Nikita Roy, each week to explore what's next with AI and its implications for the media landscape. In each episode, industry experts discuss how automated newsrooms have the potential to change journalism and uncover opportunities to optimize workflows and increase efficiency without compromising journalistic integrity. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

  1. 2D AGO

    Alessandro Alviani & Fabian Heckenberger: How Germany’s Süddeutsche Zeitung is building AI products that audience can trust

    By 2026, most leading newsrooms have moved past the question of whether AI belongs in their organization. Now the key question is: what does a sustainable AI product strategy look like when you’re building for a subscription-based business and a high-trust brand? This week on Newsroom Robots, host, Nikita Roy sits down with Alessandro Alviani, Lead for Generative AI, and Fabian Heckenberger, Managing Editor for AI, at Germany’s Süddeutsche Zeitung to discuss how they’re using AI to build the next generation of news products. This conversation looks at what happens when AI becomes a permanent layer in a newsroom’s product stack. Alessandro and Fabian walk through how they’re designing AI experiences that fit naturally with reader behavior and how they’re developing new distribution and accessibility formats that would have been impossible to sustain manually. This episode also goes deep on a topic that’s becoming a defining competency which is operational trust. What do you monitor once an AI product is live? How do you categorize failures? And how do you respond quickly when something goes wrong, without panic and without eroding your brand? This episode, we cover: 02:52 — How editorial and product roles complement each other in AI strategy 13:13 — Addressing skepticism and fear around AI in the newsroom 25:17 — Inside building the German election chatbot 31:10 — The design framework that signals AI content without eroding trust 35:30 — Real-time risk management and monitoring for live AI tools 48:50 — The two questions every newsroom should ask before greenlighting an AI project 54:55 — Closing reflections and personal AI use Sign up for the Newsroom Robots newsletter for episode summaries and insights from host Nikita Roy. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    1 hr
  2. JAN 1

    Francesco Marconi & Scott Austin: 2025 Year in Review, What Actually Changed in AI and Media

    2025 wasn’t just another year of AI experimentation in the media industry. It forced the industry to confront a bigger question: what happens when AI stops being just a newsroom tool and becomes the layer audiences experience journalism through? That is the core question heading into 2026. This week on Newsroom Robots, host Nikita Roy sits down with Francesco Marconi and Scott Austin for an end of year recap roundtable on what actually changed in AI and media in 2025 and what newsroom leaders need to prepare for heading into 2026. Francesco is the co-founder and CEO of AppliedXL. He previously led R&D at The Wall Street Journal and built some of the earliest AI and newsroom automation systems at The Associated Press. Scott leads business development at Symbolic.ai, an AI assisted publishing tool. He is also a journalist and digital media veteran who spent years at The Wall Street Journal as a reporter and award winning editor, and later led content partnerships at Dow Jones across major platforms. This episode covers: 03:10 — Why 2025 was journalism’s operational reckoning year 08:55 — The shift from search to answers and why it breaks old business models 14:40 — Proactive AI and what ChatGPT Pulse reveals about the next distribution layer 20:30 — Journalism’s hidden work and why persistence, source building, and human judgment still matter 23:30 — Why news orgs must move upstream from content to structured knowledge 36:10 — AI agents: what they actually are, what they are not, and why transparency matters 41:20 — The overlooked shift: Model Context Protocol (MCP) and why it is a major newsroom disruption 51:05 — Predictions for 2026 Sign up for the Newsroom Robots newsletter for episode summaries and insights from host Nikita Roy. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    1h 12m
  3. Jim Friedlich, David Chivers & Matt Boggie: How the Lenfest AI Collaborative placed AI engineers in 10 newsrooms

    12/19/2025

    Jim Friedlich, David Chivers & Matt Boggie: How the Lenfest AI Collaborative placed AI engineers in 10 newsrooms

    The Philadelphia Inquirer never had an AI engineer on staff until the Lenfest AI Collaborative & Fellowship program changed that. The collaborative is a $5 million partnership between the Lenfest Institute, OpenAI, and Microsoft that placed 10 AI fellows in American newsrooms for two years. These engineers work within the organizations, building tools that solve real newsroom problems. This week on Newsroom Robots, host Nikita Roy sits down with Jim Friedlich, CEO and Executive Director of the Lenfest Institute, David Chivers, lead advisor to the Lenfest AI Collaborative and Matt Boggie, CTO of The Philadelphia Inquirer, to walk through how the program works and what the Inquirer has built as a result. The Inquirer came to the collaborative with an idea to build a full-archive search tool that would let reporters query decades of journalism. They expected it to take 24 months. Within two weeks of a Microsoft hackathon, they had working code. The tool, now called Dewey, searches everything the Inquirer has published since 1978. This episode covers: 03:02 — How the Lenfest AI Collaborative got started 05:34 — Can newsrooms trust big tech partners? 08:33 — How the fellowship works day to day 14:52– Inside the Microsoft hackathon that built Dewey in two weeks 21:37 — Training journalists to understand LLM limitations 24:07 — How AI literacy has changed newsroom culture 29:45 – How small newsrooms can get started with AI 35:14 — AI answers, search decline, and the future of audience traffic 38:15 — Rethinking journalism’s role in an AI-mediated world 41:23 — Closing reflections and personal AI use This episode of Newsroom Robots is supported by the Lenfest Institute for Journalism. Sign up for the Newsroom Robots newsletter for episode summaries and insights from host Nikita Roy. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    47 min
  4. Tav Klitgaard: How Zetland turned a newsroom problem into a global AI business

    12/15/2025

    Tav Klitgaard: How Zetland turned a newsroom problem into a global AI business

    This week on Newsroom Robots, host Nikita Roy is joined by Tav Klitgaard, the CEO of the Danish newsroom Zetland, to unpack the origin story of GoodTape — an AI transcription tool that began as an internal newsroom solution and evolved into a profitable, global product used far beyond journalism. Zetland is an audio-first newsroom in Denmark. But GoodTape wasn’t born from an AI strategy or a product roadmap. It emerged from a familiar newsroom pain point of journalists spending hours transcribing interviews, with existing tools falling short, especially in non-English languages like Danish. In this conversation, Tav breaks down how GoodTape went from an internal experiment to a standalone, subscription-based product that quickly became profitable, generated millions in revenue and was eventually divested. He also shares what building GoodTape taught Zetland about AI adoption, organizational learning, and where newsrooms should, and shouldn’t, use generative AI. This episode covers: 05:50 – How a prototype using OpenAI’s Whisper sparked GoodTape 08:36 – The moment Zetland realized GoodTape could be a real product 12:34 – How journalism’s trust and privacy standards became a product advantage 13:59 – What actually improves transcription quality beyond the model itself 15:27 – How GoodTape became profitable and contributed to Zetland’s revenue 16:29 – Why Zetland eventually divested GoodTape instead of scaling it internally 17:36 – What building an AI product taught Zetland about newsroom AI adoption 19:08 – Why Zetland uses AI for productivity, not editorial output 28:14 – A real-world example of AI use that forced Zetland to rethink its own guidelines 30:34 – Why principles matter more than rigid AI rules in newsrooms Sign up for the Newsroom Robots newsletter for episode summaries and insights from host Nikita Roy. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    38 min
  5. Markus Franz: How Germany's Ippen Digital Is Prototyping the AI-Powered Newsroom of the Future

    11/26/2025

    Markus Franz: How Germany's Ippen Digital Is Prototyping the AI-Powered Newsroom of the Future

    How do you redesign a newsroom’s entire workflow when AI is no longer a single tool, but a collection of agents, voice interfaces, and ambient intelligence changing how journalism gets produced? This week on Newsroom Robots, host Nikita Roy is joined by Markus Franz, Chief Technology Officer at Ippen Digital, one of Germany’s largest digital media networks with more than 80 online news and media portals. This episode was recorded live at the Digital Growth Summit in Stuttgart, where Markus shared how his team is building some of the most forward-looking AI experiments in European media. Markus leads Ippen Digital’s Incubator Lab, an innovation unit focused on reimagining how publishing and AI-driven experiences will evolve. With 16 years inside the company, Markus has been central to Ippen’s digital transformation and now leads efforts around multi-agent architectures and building adaptive workflows for the newsroom. In this conversation, Markus breaks down how his lab is experimenting with multi-agent “virtual teams,” voice-first newsroom interfaces, multimodal content production and an ambient AI-powered newsroom where intelligent systems support journalists in real time. He shares what his team has learned from early prototypes, why the biggest challenges are cultural rather than technical, and how news organizations should think about guardrails, platform dependency, and the rise of self-evolving models. This episode covers: 02:22 – Why Ippen Digital built an Incubator Lab and how it’s structured as a future-focused R&D unit 04:49 – What multi-agent systems look like inside a newsroom 9:42 – The case for voice as the next major interface for both journalists and audiences 14:41 – The shift from human-in-the-loop to human-on-the-loop workflows 17:40 – Guardrails for agent systems: grounding, bounding, editorial policies 19:33 – The vision for an ambient newsroom powered by AI companions and real-time intelligence 27:31 – Why vendor lock-in and self-evolving LLMs pose new strategic risks 30:08 – Multimodal personalization and rethinking how news is experienced 34:27 – Why most AI pilots fail and what experimentation looks like in practice 49:19 – Markus’s personal AI stack and how he uses these tools day-to-day Sign up for the Newsroom Robots newsletter for episode summaries and insights from host Nikita Roy. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    52 min
  6. Olle Zacharison: How BBC News is Shaping its AI Strategy for the Next Era of Journalism

    11/15/2025

    Olle Zacharison: How BBC News is Shaping its AI Strategy for the Next Era of Journalism

    How do you bring AI into a newsroom as big and globally distributed as the BBC, an editorial network that stretches across 42 languages and more than 5,000 journalists? This week on Newsroom Robots, host Nikita Roy talks to Olle Zachrison, Head of News AI at BBC News, where he leads the BBC’s efforts to advance AI use and strengthen its journalism and audience experiences. Previously, the Head of AI at Swedish Radio, Olle has spent the past few years implementing practical newsroom AI workflows while upholding public-service values. In this conversation, Olle breaks down BBC’s four-part AI strategy, covering large-scale translation and transcription, content reformatting, investigative tools, and early experiments with synthetic audio and conversational news. He shares what’s working inside one of the world’s largest news organizations, what routinely stalls AI projects, and why the most challenging part of AI transformation isn’t the technology but the collaboration required across editorial, product, and engineering. Olle also reflects on what it means to innovate as a public broadcaster in an AI-driven ecosystem, and why archives, credibility, and direct audience relationships will determine which journalism remains indispensable in the years ahead. This episode covers: 03:39 – The BBC’s four-part AI strategy: Boosting productivity, reformatting content, augmenting journalism, and innovating user experience as the core themes 05:10 – Using AI for large-scale transcription, tagging, live pages, alt text, newsletter production, and translation to save time and make content more searchable. 08:17 – Reformatting content across platforms and formats 20:59 – Innovating user experiences with synthetic audio and conversational formats 31:59 – How the BBC uses strategic themes, clear metrics, and fast pilots to decide what’s worth building and scaling 46:59 – Inside the BBC’s fine-tuned LLM and Style Assist 52:01 – What it means to be a public broadcaster in an AI-driven ecosystem 01:02:58 – Olle’s personal AI stack Sign up for the Newsroom Robots newsletter for episode summaries and insights from host Nikita Roy. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    1h 6m
  7. Vilas Dhar: Why the Future of Journalism Is Still Human

    10/08/2025

    Vilas Dhar: Why the Future of Journalism Is Still Human

    This week on Newsroom Robots, host Nikita Roy sits down with Vilas Dhar, President of the Patrick J. McGovern Foundation, one of the world's foremost philanthropies advancing AI for public good. Dhar leads a $1.5 billion endowment that has committed over $500 million to projects spanning climate action, public health, education, and democratic governance. He has served on the UN Secretary-General's High-Level Advisory Body on AI, is the U.S. government's nominated expert to the Global Partnership on AI, and was named a World Economic Forum Young Global Leader in 2022. Across philanthropy, policy, and technology, Dhar carries one central conviction: technology may accelerate, but the future of journalism and society must remain human-centered. Dhar introduces a three-part framework for ethical AI deployment (responsible data, clear boundaries, and transparency) and explains how to translate abstract principles into concrete newsroom decisions. He unpacks his LISA framework (Listen, Involve, Share, Assess) for audience-centered AI design, and tackles the hardest questions facing newsroom leaders: Should we buy or build AI tools? How do we balance innovation with environmental sustainability? What happens to human creativity when machines can create? But perhaps most powerfully, Dhar challenges a deeply held belief in journalism: that media organizations can remain ‘just’ media companies in an AI-driven world. There is no way to be a media organization today without also being a technology organization, he argues, and that shift requires not just new tools, but a fundamental reckoning with organizational identity and purpose.   This epiosde covers: 00:31 – Introducing Vilas Dhar and his human-centered AI vision: Why technology should serve dignity, equity, and democracy—not just profit 02:17 – The three-part framework for ethical AI: Responsible data, clear boundaries, and transparency as actionable principles 07:08 – Questions leaders must ask before deploying AI: Who's involved? Who's accountable? Who has editorial control over AI use? 10:16 – The LISA framework: Listen, Involve, Share, Assess to turn AI experimentation into behind-the-scenes reporting that builds public trust 13:30 – Navigating ethical dilemmas around AI-generated content 13:51 – The three phases of newsroom AI adoption 18:54 – Why "we're not a tech company" no longer works 23:12 – Organizational reckoning in an 18-month transformation cycle 25:23 – Why smaller, targeted models and collective action matter more than massive systems 29:14 – Fighting misinformation with AI 34:13 – What journalism is missing compared to other industries 37:01 – The evolving role of human creativity and agency 39:33 – The McGovern Foundation's North Star 44:23 – How Vilas uses AI personally Sign up for the Newsroom Robots newsletter for episode summaries and insights from host Nikita Roy. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    47 min
  8. Ludwig Siegele: Inside The Economist’s AI Playbook

    09/23/2025

    Ludwig Siegele: Inside The Economist’s AI Playbook

    How does a 182-year-old global magazine stay ahead in the age of generative AI? This week on Newsroom Robots, host Nikita Roy is joined by Ludwig Siegele, Senior Editor for AI Initiatives at The Economist. After more than 25 years reporting from San Francisco, Berlin, and London, Siegele now leads the publication’s AI strategy. He discusses how The Economist launched its AI Lab—a startup-style group within the organization with the freedom to test bold ideas and move quickly. The lab is charged with looking years ahead, preparing for a future where much of journalism’s supply chain may be automated, and ensuring The Economist maintains its identity in an AI-driven media ecosystem. From practical newsroom wins like AI-powered translation and research pipelines to more experimental projects such as TikTok video dubbing and the SCOTUS bot, Siegele explains how The Economist is testing, iterating, and learning in real time. He also reflects on what hasn’t worked, the challenges of newsroom adoption, and why the next phase of journalism may require redefining the role of the journalist itself. In this episode: 00:00 – Introducing Ludwig Siegele & The Economist’s AI journey 01:31 – How AI experimentation began at The Economist 03:26 – Overcoming newsroom fear of ChatGPT 04:53 – Building AI infrastructure and upskilling staff 07:10 – The tools and vendor partnerships powering experiments 08:29 – Why adoption is harder than building tools 12:10 – Translation, research, and NotebookLM as newsroom game changers 16:06 – How automation could reshape the journalist’s role 18:41 – Launching The Economist AI Lab 24:11 – Audience-facing AI experiments (TikTok dubbing, Espresso app, SCOTUS bot) 26:05 – Partnering with Google NotebookLM while protecting the brand 30:02 – Scraping, monetization, and the future of publisher revenue 33:41 – Measuring ROI on AI initiatives 37:40 – The biggest barriers to newsroom AI adoption 39:14 – How Ludwig uses AI personally in art and culture 40:40 – Closing reflections Sign up for the Newsroom Robots newsletter for episode summaries and insights from host Nikita Roy. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    41 min

Ratings & Reviews

5
out of 5
15 Ratings

About

Looking to explore the intersection of AI and journalism? Influential thought leaders in the industry join data scientist and media entrepreneur, Nikita Roy, each week to explore what's next with AI and its implications for the media landscape. In each episode, industry experts discuss how automated newsrooms have the potential to change journalism and uncover opportunities to optimize workflows and increase efficiency without compromising journalistic integrity. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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