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GY-HM650 |
WWSB |
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
JVC
GY-HM650 PROHD CAMERA SAVES WWSB THOUSANDS
IN SATELLITE TRUCK COSTS
WITH ONE ASSIGNMENT
Florida Station Provides Live
Coverage from Wallenda’s Arizona Tightrope Walk
- WAYNE, NJ (July 2,
2013) –
Sarasota, Fla., resident Nik
Wallenda gained national attention last month when he completed a
1,400-foot-long tightrope walk across the Little Colorado River
Gorge near the Grand Canyon in Arizona. The event was shown live on
the Discovery Channel on June 23, but WWSB, an ABC affiliate based
in Sarasota (DMA #14), used the built-in streaming capabilities of
the JVC GY-HM650 ProHD mobile news camera to provide live coverage
of press conferences and other events from Arizona for Wallenda’s
hometown fans.
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- With only a
two-person team, anchor Lauren Dorsett and creative service producer
Charlie Yeagley, who handled shooting duties, the station provided
live coverage of Wallenda’s arrival and press conferences, as well
as stand-ups from the event. WWSB had previously covered Wallenda’s
tightrope walk across Niagara Falls in June 2012, where the station
had coordinated with another ABC affiliate for satellite uplink
time.
- Jack Dillon, director
of engineering of Calkins Media Broadcast Division, which is part of Pennsylvania-based Calkins
Media and includes WWSB, WTXL, and WAAY, said the use of the
GY-HM650’s built-in live streaming capabilities for live shots
saved WWSB roughly $10,000 for satellite truck rental, as well as
additional uplink fees. “We covered a
local story 1,500 miles away at a cost of travel for two people,”
Dillon said.
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- Rather than a
Verizon 4G LTE modem, which attaches directly to the GY-HM650 via
USB, WWSB used a Verizon 4G LTE Mobile Hotspot, which Yeagley kept
in his pocket during live shots. Most of the time, the GY-HM650’s
live delay was around two seconds, which Yeagley attributed to a
“great 4G network” in the region. “The camera setup worked
during every live shot,” he added. “The quality of the output
was unbelievable, considering we were using the camera with only a
4G Wi-Fi hotspot.”
- It was very easy
for Yeagley to move from one live shot to the next – with the 4G
hotspot in his pocket, he grabbed his camera and tripod, walked to
the next location, turned on the camera and hotspot, and he was
live. In contrast, he watched a shooter from a local station unravel
two spools of cable and struggle to run them underneath a boardwalk
to get the same live shot. “There was definitely some jealousy –
and a lot of interest,” Yeagley recalled. “He started taking
pictures of our camera and sending them to his news director.”
-
- The GY-HM650
also streamlined the workflow. Between locations, while Dorsett was
driving, Yeagley would use the camera’s built-in clip trimmer to
edit specific clips, which he would then upload via FTP to a shared
site for the company. As a result, the individual files could be
edited at WWSB or other Calkins Media stations and newspapers.
- “I love the camera. I was really
impressed,” said Yeagley, “The amount of work I didn’t have to
do for a live shot made my job easier. It allowed us to focus on our
product, as opposed to worrying about technical stuff.”
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- The Wallenda
coverage was WWSB’s first use of the camera’s built-in
streaming. While Dillon said the GY-HM650 should be considered an
addition to microwave and satellite uplinks, not a replacement, WWSB
is now using the technology regularly to produce live shots from
Venice, Fla., which is about a 30-minute drive from the station.
“This is absolutely an additional tool we can use to get content
back to the station,” he said. “Now we can reach out and do more
and more live content. This is a better way to serve our audience
and give them the live content that they want.”
-
- Since purchasing
its first cameras earlier this year, Calkins Media has standardized
on the GY-HM650, according to Dillon. WWSB has three units, while
WTXL, the ABC affiliate serving Tallahassee-Thomasville, Fla. (DMA
#106), has six and the corporate office in Levittown has one. The
company is ordering an additional three cameras for WWSB and six for
WAAY, the ABC affiliate for Huntsville-Decatur, Ala. (DMA #79). “The
camera produces quality video, and at this price point, to be able
to have the capabilities and flexibility this camera gives us is a
big advantage,” he added.
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- ABOUT JVC PROFESSIONAL PRODUCTS COMPANY
-
Headquartered in Wayne, New Jersey, JVC
Professional Products Company is a division of JVC Americas Corp., a
wholly-owned subsidiary of JVC Kenwood Corporation. JVC
is a leading manufacturer and distributor of broadcast and
professional video and audio equipment, D-ILA front projection
systems, and Super LoLux HD video security products. For further
product information, visit JVC’s Web
site at http://pro.jvc.com
or call (800) 582-5825.
# # #
Caption: WWSB creative
service producer Charlie Yeagley shows off the JVC GY-HM650 ProHD
mobile news camera and Verizon 4G LTE Mobile Hotspot used to provide
live coverage of press conferences and other events related to Nik
Wallenda’s tightrope walk across the Little Colorado River Gorge in
Arizona last month for its viewers in Sarasota, Fla
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