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・ Icarus F99 Rambo
・ Icarus Festival for Dialogue between Cultures
・ Icarus imagery in contemporary music
・ ICARUS Initiative
・ Icarus Interstellar
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ICast
・ ICasualties.org
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・ ICAT Design & Media College
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・ Icaunauna aurantium
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・ ICB
・ ICB Banking Group
・ ICBC (disambiguation)
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ICast : ウィキペディア英語版
ICast

''The CBS News iCast'' was a daily news audio podcast, created and first hosted by CBS News' New York-based Correspondent and Anchor Chris Mavridis. According to the CBS Corporation, the iCast was the world's first daily network news podcast. It was available at CBSnews.com and aggregated to hundreds of other websites.
== Description ==

The ''CBS News iCast'' launched on July 26, 2006. It was created and developed by CBS News correspondent and anchor Chris Mavridis and was intended as a daily downloadable network newscast for 18- to 34-year-olds. New York Times Arts reporter Steven McElroy (wrote: ): "(the iCast) is the first network newscast developed specifically as a podcast." Access.com described (the iCast ) as a "non-traditional, actuality-heavy five-minute newscast." The runtime was fluid, ranging from 5–7 minutes in length. Under the direction of Mavridis, a correspondent with CBS News (since 2002 ), the iCast was initially presented in a "theatre-of-the-mind" radio format, employing dramatic elements mixed with natural-sound audio, news interviews and current music. Mavridis developed the style that mimicked talking to pre-recorded interviews and newsmakers.
''Billboard'' magazine's Radio and Records described Mavridis's original iCast format as transforming "the traditional role of a reporter into more of an audio guide with an edge who leads the listener through a news story's chain of interrelated actualities."
Each show opened with the big story of the day, usually in a mock-conversation format, inserting pre-taped interviews and field reports to create the illusion of a conversation. The second segment is usually another major story of the day told in a slightly more sobering method. It is followed by "The World", which details three typically odd international news pieces, followed by the closing item, which was often an odd "kicker" story which usually involved heavy music production.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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