A Day at News 7 write up
Lyndon State College is unlike any other college because of its intense
hands-on Television program. News 7 is based on campus and is organized
and run by the students themselves. This station operates almost exactly
like a real news organization, broadcasting a newsbreak at three
o’clock that tells viewers what to expect for the later half hour news
show from 5:30pm to 6 o’clock Monday through Friday. There are many
different aspects to working in the newsroom from reporters, field
camera operators, anchors, a director, producer, and a team of behind
the scenes students who help broadcast the show. Everyday reporters and
cameramen/women find and go out on their own stories and leads that then
get put on the evening broadcast either that very night or the
following night. Once back they edit their footage and add voice-overs.
After that the next step is setting up the newsroom.
In the hour before the show the newsroom becomes frantic. Technical
difficulties, timing issues, and conflicts all arise and must be fixed
by the 5:30 deadline because ‘the show must go on.’ Besides all the
stories being loaded into the data base and the ‘rundown’, basically the
playbill, being rearranged there are a number of jobs that students
occupy that are all essential for the show to run. ‘Behind the scenes’
jobs include audio, who sets the levels and brings the sound in and out
during the show, ‘Playback’ who loads each video and plays it at the
correct time, and the two camera operators who frame up each shot and
move around the studio during the show. Each job is equally important
and without one of them the show could not happen.
News 7 covers the surrounding towns of the Northeast Kingdom
and has an impact of the people who tune in. As a rule of thumb the
stories we cover cannot be about Lyndon State itself unless it has a big
enough impact on the greater community. This is because the majority of
the statistical population that watches the broadcast is the elderly
non-college community. We cater to stories that affect their lives such
as town meetings in other towns that may result in changes that they may
not have heard about otherwise. Anyone who watches the show can
critique what they have seen online, and many people do. Lyndon State
has received many awards due to our television program.
About 90% of students who graduate from Lyndon State College through the
Television program get jobs right out of college, many of which are
spread out throughout the United States.
Audio: Ryan Holmes
Pictures and Soundslides: Bryan White
Write up: Richie Hansen
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