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Reflection: The End of Television As We Know It
[ This article was first published in the June, 2009, issue of
Larry's Final Cut Pro Newsletter. Click here to subscribe. ]
REFLECTION: THE END OF TELEVISION AS WE KNOW IT
OK. This isn't really technical, and has nothing to do with Final
Cut, but I was thinking about this last week and wanted to share this
with you...
Last Friday, June 12, marked the end of analog television broadcasting
in the US. Tomorrow, all over-the-air transmission becomes digital. I'm all in
favor of technology and change, but I wanted to say good-bye to an era.
I got my start in broadcast television, but even before then, growing
up in small towns in Wisconsin, I remember how magical TV seemed. First,
in the days of black and white, being able to pull images out of the
air with thin pieces of wire - and family rituals developed around
EXACTLY how those rabbit ears should be pointed to get the best signal,
NOT that my brothers were EVER right, of course - then, came color.
When color television first appeared, the TV set was the size of a
bookcase laid on its side. More than entertainment, it was a sizable
piece of very expensive furniture. Filled with strangely glowing tubes,
it radiated both heat and a sense of unlimited power.
I still remember, as a small child, the first color television that
came into our small community of Sturgeon Bay, Wisconsin. The TV was
displayed in a local furniture store and was four feet high, three
feet deep, and eight feet wide. It had about a 15 inch screen and weighed
about 800 pounds. The store owner, Katie Malvetz, was a friend of
the family and, when NBC announced they would be playing the Wizard
of OZ in COLOR for the first time on network television, Katie decided
to turn this into a social event.
She and a team of men moved the TV from her showroom to her living
room, then she invited her friends to watch with her. When the movie
started, there must have been 30 people - adults and kids - in the
room. And when Dorothy opened the door to step from black-and-white
Kansas into colorful Oz... well, there wasn't a dry eye
in the house.
To this day I remember how stunned I was to see color images invisibly
coalescing on a TV screen. I think, from that moment, I wanted to learn
more about how it was done. I was hooked on media.
Fast-forward fifty or so years to last Friday.
The switch from analog to digital won't have the same poignancy
as the switch from black-and-white to color. Nor will families gather
in living rooms across the country to admire the transition.
The world has changed... and so have we.
But I didn't want the switchover to occur without reflecting
back on where we've been.
Television has the power to spark emotions - and memories - with the
stories it tells. And, sometimes, the stories we tell about it.
UPDATE - June 16, 2009
Ian Hart writes:
Regarding your reflection "The end of television as we know
it", where you wax lyrical about getting your start in broadcast
television... You must be a young man. I got my start working on
35mm and 16mm film at the London Film School in the mid 1960s. I
wonder whether the the constant "high" I experienced at
that time was due to my discovery of this exciting new art form or
just the effects of sniffing the film glue! I clearly remember the
day that our Editing lecturer, David Gladwell, brought in the big
new thing: our first guillotine tape splicer! Prior to that we had
all had to master the black art of cement splicing (where you lost
a frame in 16mm) and calculating "build-up" if you changed
your mind about the cut.
Like everyone else in the 1970s I had to learn video editing with
its 10 second roll-ups and loss of quality every time you made an
edit and (pre-computer) having to re-edit everything from a hand-written
EDL if you wanted to change a shot near the beginning... For me,
video editing was a 20 year stretch in purgatory, an aberration.
It turned the art of editing into a mechanical process. So you can
imagine my joy in the mid-1990s on discovering digital editing, first
with Premier 1.0 and then Final Cut Pro 1.0. All the metaphors related
to film editing. It was like coming home again.
I'm thankful to you for all the tips and tricks and shortcuts in
your workshops. They make my "super tape splicer" work
faster, but I'm very pleased to find that the Wardour St. training
I got 45 years ago in logging rushes, making work prints,
filing trims, marking up opticals; not to mention laying sound tracks,
marking music cues, recording Foley tracks, audio sweetening and
mixing, etc. are all transferable to digital editing.
Life is good again.
Tom Wolsky adds:
I so resemble this. I think I may have been to the same film school
a couple of years before or after him. When I was there it was the
London School of Film Technique.
Larry replies: Thanks, Ian and Tom, for sending these.
Larry Jordan is a post-production consultant and an Apple-Certified Trainer in Digital Media with over 25 years experience as producer, director and editor with network, local and corporate credits. Based in Los Angeles, he's a member of both the Directors Guild of America and the Producers Guild of America.
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