Sentences with phrase «before television cameras»

North Medford's players stood before the television cameras, talked in to microphones, boasted.

Not exact matches

Going where no reality show cameras had gone before, TLC this fall aired «Sister Wives,» a television series that invited voyeurs into the lives of a fundamentalist Mormon family that practices polygamy.
Moyers's people had swarmed over the Indiana University campus in successive waves of producers, executive producers, directors and associate directors; of lighting people, camera people, sound people and questions - from - the - audience people; had added a participant (Nicholas von Hoffman) to be sure the affair would be telegenic; had phoned the panelists before the event with their own list of topics and ideas; had thrown together a wooden platform just for their cameras, which cameras prevented many in the actual audience from seeing the panelists; had shifted the meeting rooms to meet the exacting requirements for the paraphernalia of television; had fed questions to members of the audience, and instructions «from the truck» to the moderator («move on»); and then had fashioned from 12 hours of tape one hour that might have been made in a New York city hotel room.
One evening the television weatherwoman loses her sound and stands before the cameras in speechless embarrassment.
We've had this debate before, it's easy for people who don't go to say give up the season ticket but I have a very good seat with five mates literally behind the television camera and if I give it up there is no way I can ever get it back again.
I've always had a desire to do television and had done some on - camera work projects before last year including an appearance on HGTV, a video project with Nate Berkus and Target and a web series for TLC about decorating with color, as well as a lot of expert segments and other web videos.
The unthinkable has happened, and it's not long before television news cameras across the globe bring images of death and destruction to the evening news.
Charles Tyner went back to the stage in 1977, occasionally stepping before the cameras for such TV movies as The Incredible Journey of Dr. Meg Laurel (1979), theatrical features like Hamburger: The Motion Picture (1985) and Planes, Trains and Automobiles (1991), and his recurring role as Howard Rodman on the weekly television drama Father Murphy (1981).
The framing and the camera movements are all very routine, even dated; one would have said it looks like television, before television gained its current lustre.
The film intercuts the television coverage (the cameras were so close that you can see what's happening inside the bus as if you were only a few feet from the windows) with interviews with surviving hostages and with relatives and social workers who had known the hijacker, himself a survivor of the infamous massacre of street kids by the police a few years before.
On April 26, 1983, President Ronald Reagan stood before the press and television cameras in the State Dining Room at the White House and held up a report titled A Nation at Risk.
Before picking up a camera, Tambellini physically worked on the film strip, treating the emulsion with chemicals, paint, ink and stencils, slicing and scraping the celluloid, and dynamically intercutting material from industrial films, newsreels and broadcast television.
Seated before the Senate Committee on Energy and Natural Resources, 15 television cameras, and a roomful of reporters, Hansen wiped the sweat from his brow and presented his findings.
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