When I visited Houston last year, the director of engineering at KTRK (the ABC O&O) was very proud of that station's latest big innovation: as its newsroom shifts from focusing on traditional newscasts to being live all day on digital, there was no way the budget was going to allow for a traditional full control room.
So they've created a podium in the newsroom for the anchor who's also functioning as her own TD - there's a touchscreen in front of her to bring up video and audio sources and graphics, live on the fly.
Does it work? They say it does, and that it will be a model for other stations going forward, though it's going to be harder to roll out in unionized stations in other markets. But if you hit up KTRK's stream during the day and you see an anchor in the newsroom instead of the studio, she's doing her own switching as you watch.
And if broadcast TV news is going to stay viable in a world where we all have 4K production studios in our pockets, it's going to have to be more of these setups.
So they've created a podium in the newsroom for the anchor who's also functioning as her own TD - there's a touchscreen in front of her to bring up video and audio sources and graphics, live on the fly.
Does it work? They say it does, and that it will be a model for other stations going forward, though it's going to be harder to roll out in unionized stations in other markets. But if you hit up KTRK's stream during the day and you see an anchor in the newsroom instead of the studio, she's doing her own switching as you watch.
And if broadcast TV news is going to stay viable in a world where we all have 4K production studios in our pockets, it's going to have to be more of these setups.