Thursday, April 23, 2015
Fujinon Cameras
The camera of choice at WHAG is Fujinon. But why Fujinon vs. other camera brands?
The specs of Fujinon are highly rated. They have a powerful zoom, while retaining color pigmentation and avoiding blurring. The technology for Fujinon's broadcast TV lenses, with its expressive power of recreating colors with vivid clarity, has created a digital camera equipped with high image quality and a powerful zoom.
Special Guest
Occasionally WHAG news anchors like to spice up the show by bringing in guests from local businesses or fans who have something cool and unique to show the 4 state area.
On superbowl sunday the morning news anchor brought in 3 guests who made their favorite superbowl snack. Each guest arrived and waited off stage to be brought over to an NBC blue table where they went through the steps to create their superbowl snack. Like a cooking show they had a pre-made version of their dish.
Bringing in local guest makes the audience feel more connected to the show. Who doesnt love to see their friends or family members on tv. My father is a political figure who is frequently in the news and i still get excitment when seeing him on tv. It also makes the guest feel important and like their voice is being heard.
Bringing in guest not only spices up the run of the show but it makes the audience feel more connected to their local community and breaths new life into other kinds of morning news.
On superbowl sunday the morning news anchor brought in 3 guests who made their favorite superbowl snack. Each guest arrived and waited off stage to be brought over to an NBC blue table where they went through the steps to create their superbowl snack. Like a cooking show they had a pre-made version of their dish.
Bringing in local guest makes the audience feel more connected to the show. Who doesnt love to see their friends or family members on tv. My father is a political figure who is frequently in the news and i still get excitment when seeing him on tv. It also makes the guest feel important and like their voice is being heard.
Bringing in guest not only spices up the run of the show but it makes the audience feel more connected to their local community and breaths new life into other kinds of morning news.
Lighting
Selective Visibility: The ability to see what is occurring on stage. Any lighting design will be ineffective if the viewers cannot see the characters, unless this is the explicit intent.
Revelation of form: Altering the perception of shapes onstage, particularly three-dimensional stage elements.
Focus: Directing the audience's attention to an area of the stage or distracting them from another.
Mood: Setting the tone of a scene. Harsh red light has a different effect than soft lavender light.
Location and time of day: Establishing or altering position in time and space. Blues can suggest night time while orange and red can suggest a sunrise or sunset. Use of mechanical filters ("gobos") to project sky scenes, the Moon, etc.
Projection/stage elements: Lighting may be used to project scenery or to act as scenery onstage.
Plot (script): A lighting event may trigger or advance the action onstage and off.
Composition: Lighting may be used to show only the areas of the stage which the designer wants the audience to see.
The WHAG Mobile
When news needs to be on the go there are two ways WHAG chooses to capture their breaking news. The traditional way, since microwave technology and satellite usage have been used to transmit live and packaged reporting, has been with the news truck. The newest high tech way is through the TRU pack, a backpack which holds all the equipment needed for on the go reporting.
Taking a look around your own home town it is almost impossible to never see a news truck. Whether it be at a baseball game or at the scene of an accident, there is always a news truck on the go ready to capture their next report.
In order to set up a news truck so it is ready to shoot you must first be aware of a few small things.
When doing short distances (Hagerstown-Shepherdstown) the truck can use its smaller dish, which raises up to a max height of 50 feet. The truck must be level in order for the dish to raise.
Another thing news reports and the techs must be weary of before they raise the dish is of possible obstacles in the way of the dish. This could be anything from a power line to a tree branch. If the dish were to hit an object, like a power line, the dish and vehicle will burst into flames. Literally it will burst into flames and fry everything within the vehicle.
The news truck also has the feature of on the go editing. A reported can capture all his/her shots and upload all of the data for editing outside of the newsroom. They can then send that edited data via satellite straight to the newsroom to be aired.
Teleprompter
From presidential elections to local live television the teleprompter has been used as the virtual note cards to feed lines to those who chose to speak on television.
The teleprompter conveys the idea that the talent has memorized their speech and gives the viewer the sense that the person on camera has vast knowledge of the subject they are speaking on. The teleprompter also allows the speaker to connect with the audience by looking them, what seems like, directly in the eye. Have you ever noticed when watching the news that the news anchor is practically looking at you without breaking eye contact? This is because the teleprompter is reflected onto a glass which is placed right in front of the camera.
The script, which is mostly written up by the anchor, is loaded onto a monitor backwards. the monitor is them mounted onto the camera at an angle that allows the anchor to read the reflection off of the highly reflective glass which is placed right in front of the camera.
The device started out in 1948 as a roll of butcher paper rigged up inside half of a suitcase. Actor Fred Barton Jr., a Broadway veteran, was nervous for those that had been either in theater or the movies, the transition to television was difficult, because there was a much greater need for memorizing lines. Instead of memorizing the same batch of lines over the course of months, Barton was now expected to memorize new lines on a weekly or even daily basis. Cue cards were sometimes used, but relying on unsteady stagehands to flip between them could sometimes cause catastrophic delays.
On April 21, 1949, Schlalfly submitted a patent application for his “television prompting apparatus,” and in the tradition of offstage “prompters” who had been relied upon to feed forgotten lines to actors, he called his device the TelePrompTer. At first, the machine was used for its intended purpose: televised entertainment. It was part of a live production for the first time on December 4, 1950, as actors in the CBS soap “The First Hundred Years” read their lines off a device mounted to the side of the camera. Now a telepropmter is a must have in the studio world both for live and taped TV.
The teleprompter conveys the idea that the talent has memorized their speech and gives the viewer the sense that the person on camera has vast knowledge of the subject they are speaking on. The teleprompter also allows the speaker to connect with the audience by looking them, what seems like, directly in the eye. Have you ever noticed when watching the news that the news anchor is practically looking at you without breaking eye contact? This is because the teleprompter is reflected onto a glass which is placed right in front of the camera.
The script, which is mostly written up by the anchor, is loaded onto a monitor backwards. the monitor is them mounted onto the camera at an angle that allows the anchor to read the reflection off of the highly reflective glass which is placed right in front of the camera.
The device started out in 1948 as a roll of butcher paper rigged up inside half of a suitcase. Actor Fred Barton Jr., a Broadway veteran, was nervous for those that had been either in theater or the movies, the transition to television was difficult, because there was a much greater need for memorizing lines. Instead of memorizing the same batch of lines over the course of months, Barton was now expected to memorize new lines on a weekly or even daily basis. Cue cards were sometimes used, but relying on unsteady stagehands to flip between them could sometimes cause catastrophic delays.
On April 21, 1949, Schlalfly submitted a patent application for his “television prompting apparatus,” and in the tradition of offstage “prompters” who had been relied upon to feed forgotten lines to actors, he called his device the TelePrompTer. At first, the machine was used for its intended purpose: televised entertainment. It was part of a live production for the first time on December 4, 1950, as actors in the CBS soap “The First Hundred Years” read their lines off a device mounted to the side of the camera. Now a telepropmter is a must have in the studio world both for live and taped TV.
Audio Board
The audio board operators job is to do two mic checks before each show. One check for all studio mics and the other for the talents volume settings. The operator must watch the overall levels through out the show when running SOT's (sound on tape) and Packages to ensure that it will stay at the same relative volume for each viewer. Have you ever noticed that the volume gets really loud out of no where when watching a TV program, but you haven't touched the remote? That is because the audio levels are not stable.
Other than the mics the audio board controls the Animation volumes, the Traffic Phone, Packages, and the NBC tease/ending music. When the director rolls the animation the audio operator fades the music so the on camera talent can be clearly heard by the viewer. Occasionally the animation will loop, meaning it will keep going even if it is not seen on camera. The audio operator has control over the sound of the animation. If the audio operator were to slide up the volume without paying attention the sound would be heard on live TV.
The audio operator also has the job to call in the Traffic alert team during weekday mornings. The operator calls the traffic alert team on the phone and tells them to stand by. Once we lock in the line the phone is connected to the audio board, we then wait for the anchor to toss it to the traffic alert team and turn on the phone mic.
Working the audio board has been a stressful yet fun experience for me. There is a large amount of multitasking involved and you must be alert at all times when operating the board. The smallest change can greatly effect the outcome of the show.
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