Newscast: for summaries, fact-first updates, and editorial storytelling with a TV desk rhythm.
Newscast is a broadcast-style template built for content that should feel like it belongs on a news desk. Deep navy fields, crimson accents, steel type, optional full-bleed plates, and persistent ticker and lower-third chrome frame every scene. Layouts range from Newscast Opening and Anchor Narrative to Live Metrics Board, Briefing Code Panel, Headline Insight, Side-by-Side Brief, Segment Break, and Field Image Focus — so briefings, roundups, and analysis read as authoritative on-air segments rather than slideshows. It also works well as a student newscast template: paste a class summary, book report, or current-events assignment into Blog2Video and it generates a narrated, broadcast-style video automatically, without needing a camera, classroom set, or assigned anchor roles.
When to use Newscast
Briefings, updates, explainers, stories that should feel like television news rather than print, and student or classroom newscasts.
Puts your article into a live-broadcast frame: globe, chrome, and on-air typography without stock b-roll.
Newscast is designed for specific content types where the visual style directly supports the message. Choosing the right template is about matching structure, tone, and audience expectations — not just picking a color scheme.
- Weekly briefings and industry roundups
- Policy and regulatory explainers
- Crisis or fast-moving story updates
- Data-backed segments with charts and metrics
- Editorial voiceovers that need a serious broadcast tone
- Student newscasts, classroom current-events projects, and school news segments
Available layouts in Newscast
Newscast includes 10 layouts. Each layout is purpose-built for a different type of content, from titles and body text to code blocks, comparisons, data visualizations, and pull quotes.
When Blog2Video generates a video from your article, it automatically selects the best layout for each scene based on the content type. You can also override layouts manually in the scene editor.
- opening
- anchor narrative
- live metrics board
- briefing code panel
- headline insight
- story stack
- side by side brief
- segment break
- field image focus
- ending socials
Example topics
Here are the kinds of articles and topics that work best with the Newscast template. If your content matches any of these patterns, Newscast is likely the strongest choice.
- Markets close higher after central bank signals
- Five takeaways from the climate summit
- What the new rules mean for your sector
- This week in our classroom: a student current-events newscast
Frequently Asked Questions
What content works best with the Newscast template?
Briefings, updates, explainers, stories that should feel like television news rather than print, and student or classroom newscasts.
How many layouts does Newscast include?
Newscast includes 10 purpose-built layouts: opening, anchor_narrative, live_metrics_board, briefing_code_panel, headline_insight, story_stack, side_by_side_brief, segment_break, field_image_focus, ending_socials. Each layout is designed for a specific content type and automatically selected based on your article structure.
Can I switch to Newscast after generating a video?
Yes. You can switch templates at any time without losing your scene edits. The same content renders differently depending on the template, so you can preview Newscast before committing.
What makes Blog2Video useful for Newscast template usage?
Creators matching content structure to template choice can start from the content they already wrote, keep the original structure intact, and turn it into a video without rebuilding everything inside a traditional editor.
Will the Newscast template usage workflow still sound like my real content?
Yes. Blog2Video uses your article, newsletter, or document as the source of truth, so the output is grounded in your real content rather than a generic stock-footage script.
How is it different from generic AI video generators?
Blog2Video's templates are designed around communication patterns, not just cosmetic skin changes.