Whether your interest lies with working at radio and television
stations, commercial sound and video production companies, corporate
video houses, or with feature and series film producers, you will
require both creative and technical skills to make it in the field of
broadcasting. That’s because broadcasting and film professionals create
new and original story ideas, manage creative production and
development, and showcase their unique vision in a number of positions
that are obtained after completing TV Broadcast Training.
Roles
within a broadcast production include studio executives, producers,
directors, writers and production crews, which all collaborate to
deliver the product. Writers are responsible for creating all plot
lines, dialogue, characters and situations for TV or film. Furthermore,
in television, the writer/producer hires the director of a given
episode, works closely with the line producer to hire the crew, oversees
casting and supervises all post-production efforts. Meanwhile, in film,
a producer is focused on getting sufficient financing as well
distributing the finished feature to theaters. Next, the director is
responsible for overseeing creative aspects of a broadcast production.
This person develops the vision and decides on how the final product
should look. A director decides camera angles, lens effects, lighting,
and set design. He or she also coordinate the actors’ moves and works
with the editor to ensure that emotions of the scenes appropriately
reflect his or her vision. Helping to carry out a director’s vision is
the film crew, which is divided into art, hair and makeup, wardrobe,
camera, production sound, electrical, editorial, visual effects and
information technology.
At Centennial College, students can
obtain TV broadcasting training in three years. The undertaking largely
consists of hands-on training with students developing a balance between
the artistic and commercial aspects of the industry. First and
foremost, students gain valuable lessons at Centennial College’s Wallace
studios, which is an HDTV broadcasting studio. It is out of this studio
that they participate in student-made films and TV, including the
JOURNAL, a student-produced newsmagazine TV show that airs live and
online. In addition, students participate in courses such as: Media:
Theory, Workplace and Issues; Tools and Processes for Communicators,
History of Broadcasting, Editing, Documentary and News Production,
Essentials for Screenwriting and much more. The practical and
theoretical courses prepare students for a 15-week industry field
placement. During this placement students apply practice to real life
situations at radio and TV stations, production houses and much more.
To
apply, Centennial College expects students to present at minimum an
Ontario Secondary School Diploma or equivalent or be 19 years of age or
older. Students must also have completed compulsory English 12C or U, or
a skills assessment, or equivalent. There are also non-academic
requirements, such as an admission session, writing test, English
proficiency as well as a portfolio of work. The portfolio should
demonstrate a student’s skill and ability to tell a story using two of
the following: videotape/ DVD, audiotape/ CD/ mini disc/ digital images/
photographic prints, scripted material in any format that was used. For
more detailed information, check out the Broadcast Production Program page.