Tuesday, November 29

West Virginia's State Flower


The Satellite Dish Is Always In Bloom in the Mountain State

(I'm from West Virginia, but I hever had a dish).

Ever since my days in college (the mid 80s) in Philippi, West Virginia (a town that in those days fought the big cable companies to operate its own cable system) I've joked that the satellite dish was the unofficial state flower of West Virginia. Driving on any highway or back road revealed the dish constantly in bloom. As the years went by they spread across the mountains and the valleys. Back then those large dishes took up space in the front yard and were the envy of neighors for miles around. It was seen as a status symbol as much as any above ground swimming pool or trampoline.

The dishes helped people in the hollers and up on the hills tune in to HBO and other cable programming because cable TV wasn't coming down their dirt road or the terrestrial signals from the local stations faded depending on what time of summer it was.

Today one Beckley man, Al Jessup, has his own garden of satellite dishes. Many of the dishes he has are smaller (but you still see some of the large ones scattered across the landscape like so many junk cars or trucks up on cinder blocks). The house-mounted modern dishes offer so many more choices than 20 years ago. Jessup tells the Register-Herald he has 12 dishes (looking to install number 13) and he scans the sky for radio and television programming.

He says he stopped counting when he lined up 5000 channels. He has package deals from DISH network but also pulls down free signals and stations from around the globe. Imagine what it's like flipping through the channels in that house.

Friday, November 25

Senior Project ASSESSMENT Revisited

JUDGMENT TIME
Project Assessment- This portion of the senior project and it is designed to challenge you to identify how you can enhance and improve your body of work while also networking with working professionals. Each student must identify and secure an off-campus professional to evaluate their project. This professional must have a relevant position in the industry in regard to the student’s project in order to assess the work and offer genuine feedback on the materials. If you're reviewer changes from the person you identify in class, you must notify the instructor.

You will schedule a review date before the last day of class to gather forthright comments and an evaluation of your project. You will also secure documentation from your reviewer in the form of a letter or e-mail to the instructor summarizing this evaluation.

You will also create a “Project Assessment Checklist” due during your project appointment with the instructor where you present the feedback from this evaluation. Based the comments received, you will make recommendations of how you would rework your project and make improvements.

Thursday, November 24

Senior Project REQUIREMENTS Revisited

FYI
Senior Project (Details Revisited)- The objective of the senior project is to create and polish material to showcase a student’s skills and abilities in broadcast communications. Senior BC projects are restricted to the creation of content for the audiences of Titan Radio, Digital 88.9 News, the Titan Sports Network, WCN, The County Line, and Coach’s Corner.

Before you begin your project, you will draft a project proposal in which you summarize with specifics what you want to create for your portfolio(s)/resume tape(s)/audition tape(s). You will identify specific assets and weakness you have in relationship to your objectives, develop a plan for utilizing those strengths and overcoming the limitations and create a timeline for presenting your content to a real audience on scheduled, hard deadlines. You should identify specifics such as day(s), hours, etc., that you will set aside each week for this endeavor.

Each student is responsible for maintaining the regular air checks, tapes, etc., for his or her project. It is your responsibility to maintain and keep your dubs, air checks, etc. throughout this endeavor. You may not scramble at the last minute to make dubs, gather tapes, etc. Failure to maintain and progress your work week to week will not be acceptable.

To complete the project you must meet all outcomes and deadlines identified in your proposal. You must also meet the department’s minimum professional standards for audio and video productions. Failure to meet those outcomes, deadlines and standards will result in zero points.

Thursday, November 17

Class Schedule UPDATE


CLASS SCHEDULE CHANGES
We will not meet as a class on December 1 or December 8. Instead each of you will schedule an appointment to meet with me to review your senior project proposal, your project and the feedback/evaluation you received from your off-campus contact.

Mark your calendars as we will NOT meet as a class on December 1 or December 8.
Instead, each member of the class will schedule an appointment to meet with me. We will meet to review your senior project, your goals and you will present the feedback and review you received on your project from your outside source.

This is what you will need to do:
  1. You must make the appointment to meet with me by December 1.
  2. You must bring an updated senior project proposal, complete with your original material and notes of your updates on timeline, changes, etc.
  3. You must share your project with me (if it’s video we can meet in the edit bays or control room, if it’s radio we can meet in the production room).
  4. You must bring documentation when you present your information/feedback from your outside reviewer.
  5. You must have a tentative decision and protocol on what you plan to do for the senior project redux.

    Any questions?

Tuesday, November 8


Can't get enough of LOST?
ABC's capitalizing on the show's popularity with something called "Lost Video Diaries." The Diaries introduce two characters stranded with the cast featured on the primetime version. The Hollywood Reporter reports, ABC's looking to partner with a wireless company, perhaps Verizon. The series will be available sometime next year.

Monday, November 7

Searching the Blogosphere

Google now features a search engine for weblogs.

With the promise to "find blogs on your favorite topics" it should be a helpful tool for some folks since some sources claim there are more than 10-million blogs on the 'net.

I googled for my name and topics I have blogged about and some of the hits were indeed on my blog. Cool.

By the way, Yahoo! has apparently enabled it's news search engine to scan through the blogosphere for a while now so the Google search is not new. However, Yahoo! fell short in my searches of my own blog topics.


http://news.search.yahoo.com

Sunday, November 6

Remembering My Grandmother

My grandmother, Nellie Johnson, recently passed away at the age of 99. She died on October 26, 2005, in a nursing home in Kingwood, WV.

Her life in rural West Virginia was always a struggle against poverty. Whether it was growing up in Appalachia as America headed into World War I or raising a family through the Great Depression and World War II or living on her own in her golden years on a fix income in Tunnelton, she was the heart of her family. Over the decades she endured her loss of loved ones including all her siblings, her husband and five of her own children and several grandchildren.

Born in Cranesville, WV, the daughter of Ulysses S. Jefferys and Emma M. Ringer Jefferys, she married my grandfather Edward Johnson and settled in the Newburg area. She had 10 children (four sons and six daughters) while she was married to my late grandfather for 45 years.

I am one of 26 grandchildren and my daughters Tess and Emma make up at least 45 great-grandchildren we can count at this point (and there are at least a dozen great-great-grandchildren).

My daughter Tess has been busy lately writing down her thoughts about her great-grandmother and what she can remember about her. I thought it appropriate for me as well and what better place to reflect than in my weblog. I know it's a bit off topic when it comes to broadcasting and my professional domain, but my grandmother was alive for the birth of broadcasting and the invention of television, etc.

When talking to Tess about why I was not saddened by my grandmother’s death I explained I felt we should celebrate her incredible journey of 99 years. I know it’s hard for eight-year old Tess to understand this, but I suggested we think about Grandma Johnson as a time traveler.

Each time we hear a historic reference to the 20th Century we know Grandma Johnson was there for it. She was born in 1906 the year of the San Francisco earthquake which American author Jack London reported on as a journalist for Collier's Weekly as an eye-witness to the disaster.

My grandmother was born when Teddy Roosevelt held the White House—and she lived to see 13 additional presidents elected.

When she was a little girl, November 11 was called Armistice Day to mark the end of World War I. Later in it became Veterans Day. She sent sons to war against the Nazis and she saw communism rise and fall in Europe.

While the telephone, electricity and indoor plumbing were innovations when she was a child, she would not benefit from such amenities for decades—indoor plumbing came to her distant farm house in the 1970s after my grandfather’s death. It’s incredible to think of all the scientific discoveries and breakthroughs that occurred during the course of her life—from the polio vaccine to the atomic bomb to the lunar landings and the Internet. Her life span came during extraordinary times. When reflecting on her life I think about how the world has changed--contemplating 20th Century history now means thinking about my grandmother and her journey as a witness and participant on that timeline.