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Re: Breaking In To Broadcast Video
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Re: Breaking In To Broadcast Video
by
Mark Suszko
on Aug 28, 2008 at 2:28:02 pm
If you're not confident of your own ability to do the job, maybe you
shouldn't
take it, no matter how tempting it is. But consider:
1 Adding a partner or "on-call" person who is already equipped with such skills and giving him a cut of the deals that come your way. Since these gigs are not every day, maybe you put him on a modest "retainer" so he's ready if you need him on short notice. The danger of course is, if he's ambitious and unethical, he can decide to cut you out and deal direct with all your contacts. One way to control that is for you to own the gear he needs to use. Another way is to become that guy yourself...
2 GETTING yourself "competent", thru specific training.
Make a list of all the things these inquiry calls are asking for, then go get trained in how those things are done. At some point you're going to then have to make a leap of faith and try to do one. With every one you do, you get better. After a while, the worst of the nerves wears off.
I would say based on your post and my past experience, the main thing a station or crewing service needs is a guy who understands how to quickly set up competent 3-point lighting, how to compose a decent interview shot, and how to properly mic a person for good sound as well as good looks. The next most asked for thing would be someone to shoot a news event like a press conference, with an eye for what a news editor needs to tell the story. Which is, getting good sound, establishing shots that orient the viewer as to time and place, and a variety of correctly-framed focal lengths of the person speaking, alternating tight, medium and wide shots to make editing easier. With that you need the sense not to zoom or pan or anything until the person wraps up a main thought, then you are quickly going to another shot before they get up to speed on the following paragraph or idea. The other "news" skill you need there is to be able to hand-hold the camera really steady on your widest lens opening, as close as you can be and keep focus, and interview people after the event, asking a few obvious questions. You need an eye for composition, to see what the background is adding or taking away from the story, what context you can add non-verbally by how you frame a shot. Like having fire trucks in the BG out of focus while interviewing a fire chief on scene, things like that. And enough b-roll and cut-away material to give an editor some choices.
You can go to training camps to learn such things. Sony used to teach a course, the workshops in Rockport are another venue. You want to look for something that stresses ENG and electronic journalism techniques. Other possibilities include courses at the local cable access station, community college or university, as well as doing scutwork and job-shadowing at the local Tv news station.
Then go get some real-world practice around town, go shoot some local town hall meeting or ribbon-cutting or some such thing. Make a ton of mistakes, they are more instructive than being perfect the first time. But the trick is to make the mistakes somewhere where there will be no consequences. Then when you get the next call, you can say: "yeah, I know how to do that!"
"Oh, you wanted to RECORD that?"
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Current Message Thread:
Breaking In To Broadcast Video
by Clifford Scott on Aug 28, 2008 at 9:38:11 am
Re: Breaking In To Broadcast Video
by Mark Suszko on Aug 28, 2008 at 2:28:02 pm
Re: Breaking In To Broadcast Video
by Clifford Scott on Aug 29, 2008 at 2:47:39 pm
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