Bruce A. Johnson
A 1981 graduate of the Boston University College of Communication, Bruce A. Johnson got his first job in broadcast television at WFTV, an ABC affiliate in Orlando, FL. While there, he rose through the ranks from teleprompter operator to videographer, editor, producer and director of many different types of programming. It was in the early 1980's that he bought his first computer - a Timex/Sinclair 1000 - a device he hated so much, he promptly exchanged it for an Atari 400. But the bug had bitten hard.
In 1987, Johnson joined Wisconsin Public Television in Madison as a videographer/editor, and still works there to the present day. His responsibilities have grown, however, and now include research and presentations on the issues surrounding the digital television transition, new consumer technology and the use of public television spectrum in homeland security. He freelances through his company Painted Post MultiMedia, and has written extensively for magazines including DV and Studio Monthly.
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Sunday, November 23, 2008
or: You Can Lead A Whore To Culture…
While it is true that I am not a full-time freelancer - that is to say, I have a day job, and I use freelance work to augment my salary - it is still true that the cratering economy affects me, and even more all my friends that ARE full-time freelancers. And while my day-job is at a statewide public television network, I actually got my start in TV at a commercial station, the ABC affiliate in Orlando, FL. Back in the early 1980’s, Orlando was still in the early part of the Walt Disney-fueled population explosion, and in the six years I was at WFTV, the market grew from #38 to #26, which is astonishing growth (it is #23 now.) I consider it my great good fortune to have run across a few mentors in my time there, and one lesson I learned comes to the top of my mind on a daily basis.
I was lucky to land at WFTV, a place that at the time that still did a lot of local production. I worked on an early-morning live variety/news show, a movie strip/game show called “Dialing for Dollars,” many, many newscasts, and I got to work in the field on live remotes and on single-camera shoots of commercials, promos, and all kids of programming. What I was blissfully unaware of, however, was the relationship between the production department and the sales department. I could never seem to grasp why we couldn’t produce some of my epic programming ideas, like live coverage of a 100-mile bicycle race, or a nightly all-field-tape documentary series based on WCVB-TV Boston’s outstanding “Chronicle” series (that is still running to this day.) Once in a while, I would drop into the office of the local sales manager, a great, friendly guy named Bruce Baker. For whatever reason, he took mercy on this callow kid, patiently explaining - over and over again - the relationship between producing a local extravaganza and being able (or, more often, unable) to sell ads within it.
One day, I plopped my butt down on his couch, and waited for him to get off the phone. It was then I noticed something on his desk I had never seen before, a very small sign with a very big message. It read:
“In good times, you should advertise.
In bad times, you MUST advertise.”
Wow. That is a really important concept, and is especially true in the brave new world of the Web, where everyone can look to be as big as anyone else, if you build the message right. Of course, it is a lesson I have stubbornly refused to take to heart - if you need proof, just surf over to www.ppmm.com, which has been un-modified in several years at least. I guess the old saw - you can lead a whore to culture, but you can’t make her think - is true in spades for me.
While I haven’t spoken to him is over 20 years, I have watched Baker’s career from afar, thanks to the World Wide Web. As befits a man of his knowledge and affability, Baker has risen through the ranks of WFTV’s ownership group, Cox Communications. It seems that he will soon assume the title of President of Television Stations for Cox, after stints as general manager at WSOC, WSAN and WSB-TV and executive VP for stations with Cox. This is one of those times the old saw “it couldn’t happen to a nicer guy” fits like a glove. And the message I noticed on his desk over two decades ago is as true today as it was then. Sounds like I have an early New Years resolution to fullfill.
Sunday, November 16, 2008
What’s all the hubbub about?
OK, so here is where I shoot myself in the head, but I just don’t get the clamor around the RED cameras. Yes, I can appreciate their fabulously advanced technology. Yes, I admire their clever naming schema (whoever came up with the “Mysterium” sensor should get a big raise.) And the accountant that invented “$17K to start...$50k to actually shoot frame #1” is a genius as well.
But…
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Tuesday, November 11, 2008
With apologies to Joseph Mascelli
Anyone that has gone to school for film or video production should be aware of a book entitled “The 5 C’s Of Cinematography,” by Joseph V. Mascelli . It is a timeless classic, jammed full of essential knowledge for anyone that wants to be a shooter, editor or director. It also has one of the catchiest titles ever bestowed on a textbook, which I am shamelessly ripping off for this post. This post is about video production - live remote production - and the joys of the job.
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Tuesday, November 04, 2008
FCC Opens Up “White Spaces”
Wow, that Kevin Martin never ceases to amaze. First he becomes the first Republican populist. Now he has stood up to the National Association of Broadcasters - along with the other four members of the FCC - to create a plan to allow use of “white space,” unused television broadcast channels, as capacity for new unlicensed personal wireless services. Many people have called this new service “WiFi on steroids.” Now, the NAB hates any movement towards loosening it’s bulldog-like grip on bandwidth. To be sure, there are other groups in this fight as well, not the least of which is users of wireless microphones, but at the base of it I sense this as a power struggle. And as a long-time employee of several broadcast organizations, you’d think I’d side with the NAB, but not this time. I trust that Silicon Valley and their suppliers can design and build compliant, non-interfering devices that could make iPhones and Android devices look silly by comparison. Now they will get their chance.
Hang onto your hats. This is going to be an exciting time. And the NAB? I think they’ll survive.
Saturday, November 01, 2008
Remote Multicamera Isn’t Just For Trucks Anymore
It really wasn’t all that long ago that multicamera field production required a 50-foot truck, a dozen people, and lots of electricity, patience and aspirin.
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Wednesday, October 22, 2008
Quad-Def, Here We Come?
Thursday, October 16, 2008
The Cost Of Storage Comes Tumbling Down
If you have read Adam Wilt’s review of the Sony EX-3 camera, you know how impressed he is with it. I have had a similar opportunity to review the EX-1and think they are both exceptional steps forward in low-cost, high-quality high-def cameras. The one problem that bugs me - and, honestly, it applies to all solid-state-based recorders - is the cost of the media, and the concomitant inability to use the recording medium as a cost-effective archiving medium. Seriously, who can afford a hundred SxS cards, or fifty P2 cards?
I previously blogged about the best rumor I heard at NAB 2008: That 32Gb flash memory cards would be $5 by the next NAB. We haven’t gotten there yet, but it seems more likely with every passing week. And now, news from Down Under that could turn the EX-world on it’s head - that with the use of a simple Kensington 7-in-1 ExpressCard Media Reader, inexpensive Sandisk SDHC cards become usable in the EX-1 and EX-3! This Webpage has all the details. Could the dam finally be breaking open? Could solid-state recording finally make workflow sense for the small operator?
Stay tuned - I think this one is going to be big.
A tip ‘o the hat to Ron Shook for the initial info!
Friday, October 10, 2008
A Great Way To Have Segregated Storage
It used to be that segregating project assets was a real pain. Sure, some of us (and you know who you are!) would install removable hard drive cases, but confess: Most of us never went to the trouble. As a result, one hard drive (or several) would become a morass of media, project files, graphics, and all the assorted detritus that goes along with non-linear editing. But help is here.
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Chris Meyer | 01/07
Beware: Scripts with UIs can crash AE CS4.
Adam Wilt | 01/07
First Apple and Avid, now RED
Chris Meyer | 01/06
Forget the big screen; I wanna create for the big stage…
Scott Gentry | 01/06
Unibody constructions comes to the 17”
Scott Gentry | 01/06
Actually a llittle more complex than I thought.
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