Geek Jobs in Television Production?
Takeel asks: "I'm a geek who is about to graduate from university with a bachelor of science in television production, but, for the life of me, I can't seem to find any geek jobs in TV. I know these jobs have to exist in some form; if they didn't, we wouldn't have things like TechTV! :) Does anyone happen to know about or have a geek job in the TV production industry?"
Why does your university (you didn't say which one...) consider TV to be a science?
A Bachelor of Science degree doesn't imply that the associated field of study is a science. One can get a bachelor of science in things like performing arts, religion, and history.
A Bachelor of Science degree usually implies that the holder had a bit of extra coursework in math and science. A Bachelor of Arts degree usually carries additional study in a foreign language.
Yes, there are plenty of geek jobs in TV. But, because there are vast numbers of people trying to "break into TV", you want to paly the geek angle heavier than the TV production angle. And I would suggest you don't start with the big broadcatsters. They may have many, many jobs, but they tend to promote from the bottom up. You need to look at the small production houses. They are the ones buying the latest tech in order to get that little bit of edge, and then need someone with the necessary tech knowhow to drive the bleeding-edge kit they have bought. Anybody who can really drive state of the art IT kit - whether windows or *nix - and also relate easily and constrictively to creative artists should have no trouble getting, and keeping, a good job. If you really can straddle the tech world and the artistic world, you are on to a good thing.
Consciousness is an illusion caused by an excess of self consciousness.
That's not really what you're interested, you want to do somehting that involves "mucking about with computers". Sorry, but most of the computer stuff lies in network graphics and the weather departments (the writers and related use computers to type stuff up obviously, but you're not interested in that, it seems). Most of the equipment uses "computers", but they're all highly specialized hardware systems the users never see. The places I mentioned before where you do see something that resembles your normal computer both demand specialists in their field. As for IT stuff for the normal machines, it's contracted out to outside firms. There just isn't much to muck around with.
You mentioned that you have expierience in non-linear editing. There are only about 5 editing suites in the building that use it, and they're for high-profile national-network and sports editing. Only their best editors use them. Sorry, there's just not much that the new people get to play with
If you start as a PA, make sure you're not the only one that knows how to run the teleprompter. I saw this poor girl that had a graphic design degree that they stuck on the teleprompter one day and I never saw her anywhere else again. Sure it gets you a spot on the stage, but I'm sure running a teleprompter is not a real challenge.
I run the broadcast engineering and IT groups for the cable TV arm of a large entertainment company.
There is a wide range of jobs in the TV technology field.
There is a main split between the creatives that understand technology (like producers, graphics people, etc.) and the geeks that keep the technology running (maintenance, design, configuration, operations, etc.)
If you are a creative guy, I can't help much. That's not what I do.
What exactly are you interested in? "TV Production" would denote that you are involved with lighting, camera setup, etc. "Geek" would denote that you are involved with system design, signal quality, operations, etc.
The real hub of this kind of work is in Los Angeles. There is a huge amount of post-production done here at every level. Typically, people take lower end jobs to learn the 'real world' of production before being able to get a 'good' job doing it. Alot has to do with who you know in the business.
Email me if you want more info...
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