By
Andrew Utterback, Andrew H. Utterback, Ph.D. is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Communication at Eastern Connecticut State University. A former
Senior Production Technician, he writes from professional studio-based television experience on over 300 major production assignments.
Since 1996, Dr. Utterback has trained hundreds of students in Studio Television Production at the University of Utah, Northern Arizona
University, Marist College, and Eastern Connecticut State University.
Description
Learn how to direct television programs, understand complex directing tasks, and learn the fundamentals of studio production procedure
in this back-to-basics guide to studio-based productions. Learn about lighting, set, camera operations, floor direction, technical direction,
audio, tape, graphics, prompting, and assistant directing. As it’s one of the most challenging types of programming, the live newscast
is used to illuminate television producing and directing procedures for your newscast or other program genre. You'll soon be able to
direct any type of studio-based program with ease.
Audience:
Beginning to intermediate-level individuals interested in studio directing and producing