I remember that before Christmas last year these kind of shots were a lot more common, especially on the late news. But since the revamp there haven't been that many.
I remember that before Christmas last year these kind of shots were a lot more common, especially on the late news. But since the revamp there haven't been that many.
The studio seemed to 'wobble' though at the end of that shot, because the projection on the newswall presumably shifted slightly.
I remember that before Christmas last year these kind of shots were a lot more common, especially on the late news. But since the revamp there haven't been that many.
The studio seemed to 'wobble' though at the end of that shot, because the projection on the newswall presumably shifted slightly.
That was realy bad, they need to get that sorted out, it happens alot when the camera is just over the back of the desk area, it slips a lot then. Is it the camera causing that or the LED's above? Also some zoom shots with floor cameras, when it start to zoom out sometimes, the VR holds slightly then starts to move. Happens mostly with Mark's 10.30 link to the regions. The other VR studio never slips though.
Well tonight's evening news probably won't feature on the show-reel. It just wasn't very polished. The autocue seemed to be running a bit slow, looking at the wrong camera, awkward silences, unable to get the reporter to shut up, the scaffolding collapse headline played over pictures of the bird flu bird.
And in the London region all we saw on the regional round up of headlines was Katie fixing her hair and the camera zooming out of her face.
Yes, and what's that London Tonight Tonight all about.
I was flicking through the channels and noticed it.
It's a daily Newsletter from the London Tonight team promising a look into the day's programme on what stories should appear and apparently some behind the scenes look at the programme.
It's a daily Newsletter from the London Tonight team promising a look into the day's programme on what stories should appear and apparently some behind the scenes look at the programme.