Thursday, August 22, 2013

Directing Live Golf TV, or Hitting a Straight One-Iron...

Throughout my career I have had the opportunity to be the director, and/or the technical director on live sports events. As a technical director (or "TD") I've worked every sport involving a stick, ball, or motor. As a director I've worked NFL and AFL football games, professional tennis, college basketball, football, and baseball, boxing, and a few other shows here and there. I have to say - the more PGA Tour golf events I work as a technical director, the more I marvel at what the folks who direct live golf tournaments can do. It really is an art.

Think about it: directing basketball involves using cameras that are positioned around a rectangular court, free from major obstructions. Compared to other sports, the ball is mammoth in size and it's fairly easy to anticipate the path of the ball and players sling it up and down the court. Now consider golf: instead of one court, you have eighteen. And they aren't rectangular...they are oddly shaped and vary in length, width, and even height! There are obstructions everywhere, and the ball is microscopic and could travel in just about any direction, depending upon lift, wind and other factors. Oh - just to make it more difficult, there are NO timeouts - it's all going down out there simultaneously, all over the course!
"Great golf directors never get caught without cameras on key holes, to capture key moments. Somehow they see the whole course at once, and know how to get cameras and operators moved all over the course in time for the perfect shot."

In golf, instead of having stationary cameras positioned on all eighteen of those "courts" - there are typically certain holes with no cameras, some with one, and perhaps some with two. To cover the entire course, the director must dispatch cameras and camera operators throughout the day, from hole to hole. They need to stay on top of every nuance of the tournament, who's up, who's down, who's out, who's making a charge. The director must then reposition those cameras to the most suitable locations around the course - taking into account camera cabling, operator logistical moves, lens lengths, hazards on every hole, and where the story lines are most likely to unfold. In effect, they are directing eighteen basketball games at once, darting in and out of each game on the fly (with the producer's help). Great golf directors never get caught without cameras on key holes, to capture key moments. Somehow they see the whole course at once, and know how to get cameras and operators moved all over the course in time for the perfect shot. "Tom, move from three tee to fifteen fairway. Your camera will be moved to thirteen green for Liz to operate. She's moving from four green and dropping Rodger off at six fairway before she gets to thirteen. I want you at fifteen in time for Adam Scott to tee off there."

I honestly don't know how they do it. If all of the cameras are already at a hole, I can direct it as well as anybody. But that's not the real art or talent in golf directing. That's the easy part! True golf directors have that innate perception to capture every great moment while making fifteen cameras seem to be a phalanx of one hundred. The next time you watch a golf tournament on television, sit back, relax...and try to imagine the artistic swaths of camera moves across the entire course, that bring you those pictures and story lines. It really is a beautiful thing to watch unfold.   

Tuesday, April 16, 2013

What We All Lost Yesterday

Yesterday, just as the Boston Marathon starter's pistol was fired, my flight was landing in Jacksonville. From a frequent traveler standpoint, everything was business-as-usual. I've run countless marathons over the years, and qualified for and completed the Boston Marathon 3 times. At one point almost a year ago, I harbored aspirations of re-qualifying for this year...but then real-life got in the way and I figured it best to wait until I can give it a proper effort. You see, roughly 5% (give or take) of those that run marathons are fast enough to qualify for Boston...it is every American marathoner's holy grail.

Yesterday afternoon, as the horrific events at the finish line unfolded, my inbox started lighting up with pings from friends, asking if I was running it this year. Later I read posts and comments from some people online who dismissed the bombings as if to say "Hey, it doesn't really affect me, that's just a bunch of crazy runners up north...what do you think of my new hairdo?" To this I'm here to tell you: it will affect EVERYONE.

Do you remember taxiing to your gate, and seeing the bubbly faces of your children through the gatehouse windows, jumping up and down in anticipation of their dad coming home? I do. Do you remember not having to worry about "liquids, gels, and aerosols" and the 3-1-1 rule? I do. Do you remember strolling into concert venues with a tote bag of snacks & supplies, without security personnel demanding to rifle through the contents? I do. These are but a few of the freedoms we lost after 9-1-1. Now we can't buy a cup of coffee or bottled water in the main terminal and carry it through security, because it somehow presents a risk.

Think the Boston murders (let's call it what it is) of innocent bystanders at the marathon yesterday won't have any affect on your life? Think again. Security measures will perhaps get tighter, even at simple local events. Insurance premiums could rise for those events, meaning the entry fees of your next softball tournament, charity walk, or fishing tournament could rise significantly.

In contrast to yesterday's simple, routine flights - today's were a whole different matter. News crews were noticeably on-site at 2 of the 3 airports I flew through today. Security was tighter; it took much longer to get through the screening area, as everything became more thorough. Whether you are an athlete or not, the heinous bombing of innocents yesterday at one of America's most storied events - on Patriots Day no less - will have a ripple affect that will impact every one of us. We all lost something yesterday. We all lost another measure of our freedom.