View allAll Photos Tagged boradcast

This was the backside of a slow moving cold front. Later today it seemed to stall and T-Storms continued. This was an early morning photo on my way to work. Stars are visible on the upper right hand corner of the photo. 6-sec. exposure on tripod.

GH5S rigged with the old legend Panasonic LA7200 16:9 conversion lens (1.33X anamorphic adaptor) for the DVX100 tape camcorder, attached in front of Lumix 12-35/2.8 lens. ZhiYun Crane 2 gimbal with handlebar and bluetooth remote, and my trusty old TVlogic VFM-056W boradcast HD monitor. Most of the times now I use the Atomos Shogun Inferno for monitoring and external recording, HDR preview etc. But the little 5" is really light weight and very nice for framing when shooting internally, and it works with the stretch ratio of this lens. The setup shoot nice 2.37:1 cinemascope anamorphic, properly de-squeezed on the display and monitor. And it gives a nice super-wide FOV, widest I can go with this setup without vignetting is 14mm which is 10.5mm horizontally (21mm in FF) which is really wide for anamorphics. I can shoot wide open and no need for diopters unless you go really close up. But I decided to tape the zoom fixed to 14mm, any longer FL call for diopters.

 

Product image shot with Lumix G9 and Leica Nocticron 42.5mm f/1.2, fixed lighting from one 85W flourescent daylight bulb and white brollie.

The Bedford VAL wasn't just used as a coach chassis. This is a TV outside broadcast unit.

Ernie Harwell, the Baseball Hall of Fame former broadcaster of the Detroit Tigers, sadly lost his battle with Cancer on May 4, 2010. He was a broadcaster for 55 years, 42 of them with Detroit. He was the only announcer ever to be traded for a player, as well as the first broadcaster to be inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame BEFORE he had retired. He was known for quite a few catchphrases ( "That one is long gone!" , "A fan from (insert any city here, but usually one not near Detroit) will be taking that foul ball home today.", "He stood there like the house by the side of the road, and watched it go by." ). I met him once at a Save Tiger Stadium Fanclub fund rasier and he was even nicer in person than I could evr imagine. He had a gift of making you feel like the most important person on the planet, very engaging, and despite all of his stories and memories ( he made the call of Bobby Thomson's "Shot heard round the world" in the 1951 National League Pennant game, as well as boradcasting 2 All-Star games and 3 World Series ) he was more interested in learning about you. He was one of a kind, a true gentleman, and will be sorely missed.

Managing Director, Entertainment, News and Boradcast Services, BSkyB - MIPTV 2013 keynote

at the al jazeera broadcast center in doha, qatar

at the al jazeera broadcast center in doha, qatar

5DMK2_30184

 

Aerial view of the L.A. Live megaplex which houses the ESPN Boradcast Center, The Grammy Museum, Nokia Theatre along with a host of food and entertainment venues.

at the al jazeera broadcast center in doha, qatar

sattelite dishes relaying al jazeera to different sattelites.

at the al jazeera broadcast center in doha, qatar

Broadcasting House is the headquarters of the BBC, in Portland Place and Langham Place, London. The first radio broadcast from the building was made on 15 March 1932, and the building was officially opened two months later, on 15 May. The main building is in Art Deco style, with a facing of Portland stone over a steel frame. It is a Grade II* listed building and includes the BBC Radio Theatre, where music and speech programmes are recorded in front of a studio audience, and the lobby that was used as a location for filming the 1998 BBC television series In the Red.[2]

As part of a major consolidation of the BBC's property portfolio in London, Broadcasting House has been extensively renovated and extended. This involved the demolition of post-war extensions on the eastern side of the building, replaced by a new wing completed in 2005. The wing was named the "John Peel Wing" in 2012, after the disc jockey. BBC London, BBC Arabic Television and BBC Persian Television are housed in the new wing, which also contains the reception area for BBC Radio 1 and BBC Radio 1Xtra (the studios themselves are in the new extension to the main building).

The main building was refurbished, and an extension built to the rear. The radio stations BBC Radio 3, BBC Radio 4, BBC Radio 4 Extra and the BBC World Service transferred to refurbished studios within the building. The extension links the old building with the John Peel Wing, and includes a new combined newsroom for BBC News, with studios for the BBC News channel, BBC World News and other news programming. The move of news operations from BBC Television Centre was completed in March 2013.[3]

The official name of the building is Broadcasting House but the BBC now also uses the term new Broadcasting House (with a small 'n') in its publicity referring to the new extension rather than the whole building, with the original building known as old Broadcasting House

Lewis John Wynford Vaughan-Thomas CBE (1908 - February 4, 1987), was a Welsh newspaper journalist and radio and television broadcaster with a lengthy career. In later life he took the name Vaughan-Thomas after his father.

 

He was born in Swansea, the second son of Dr. David Vaughan Thomas, Professor of Music, and Morfydd Lewis. He attended Swansea Grammar School where the English Master was the father of Dylan Thomas who was just entering the school at the time that Vaughan-Thomas was leaving for Exeter College, Oxford where he read Modern History and gained a second class degree.

 

In the mid 1930s he joined the BBC and in 1937 gave the Welsh commentary on the Coronation of King George VI. This was the precursor to several English commentaries on state occasions he was to give after the war. During the war he established his name and reputation as one of the BBC's most distinguished war correspondents of WWII. His most memorable report was from an RAF Lancaster bomber during a real bombing raid over Berlin. Other notable reports were from Anzio, the Burgundy vineyards, Lord Haw Haw's broadcasting studio and the Belsen concentration camp. In 1953 he was one of a team of BBC commentators on the Coronation of the Queen. It was fitting that he commentated on the funeral of his fellow wartime BBC correspondent Richard Dimbleby who died in 1965.

 

In 1967, after leaving the BBC, he was one of the founders of Harlech TV (HTV), now ITV Wales, being appointed Director of Programmes. He wrote numerous books, many on Wales and a favourite subject of his, the Welsh countryside and he was a frequent TV broadcaster himself. Throughout his early career with the BBC he had adopted the required BBC accent of the time but employed his more natural native Welsh accent to even better effect in his later career.

 

His wartime overview and experiences, and his successful boradcasting career later, enabled him to view life and its vagaries with what he called 'pointless optimism'. A perspective that certainly served him well.

 

He was appointed an Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) in 1974, and raised to Commander (CBE) in 1986.

 

He died in Fishguard in 1987.

  

The sunday morning Radio 6 Broadcast (simultaneously with radio 3) is always a WOMAD highlight for us. Here presenters Cerys matthews and Lopa Kathari present The east Pointers, Buika, Dom la Nena and Bafula. From a collection of photographs taken at WOMAD Charlton Park, 28th - 31st July 2016.

 

WOMAD stands for "World of Music, Arts and Dance". We traveled light with small cameras and just photographed what appealed to us rather than trying to capture the whole event and every act!

 

in the al jazeera arabic channel broadcast buiding in doha, qatar

in the al jazeera arabic channel broadcast buiding in doha, qatar

Former TTTV studios, Newcastle quayside.

Bonjour a tous (Da jia Hao ! )

J'ai réalisé un film de 4"50 minutes

Entre La Chine (Shanghai) et Tournai (Belgique Hainaut)

Je vous propose ici un extrait afin d'en évaluer l'intérêt général. Description courte : Il s'agit d'un film musical entre nos cultures et ce qu'elle ont de mystique et de puissante à travers des images que j'ai tournées et réalisée entre mon long séjour en Chine de 11 années et mon retour difficile en L'Europe avec toutes les lourdeurs de notre système paralysant !

Merci pour vos avis et témoignages !

 

Description de l'extrait :

Des images du carnaval de Tournai (Hainaut Belgique wapi ) 2019, ainsi que des images originales que j'ai réalisée en Chine

J'ai voulu exprimer le sentiment fort qui m'habite entre les deux cultures et ce qu'elle ont de magnifique.

Ce sentiment d'un retour a notre vieux continent avec une certaine mélancolie.

 

C'est surtout un film volontairement énigmatique et sensoriel que j'ai fait pour exprimer la force de nos 2 cultures.

 

J'ai voulu bâtir et démontrer cette idée très tangible d'une nouvelle forme d'humanité basée sur notre imaginaire et nos ancêtres, aussi puissant qu'il en est capable de créer la beauté. R.B

Il s'agit d'un travail artistique basé sur des combinaisons temporelles et culturelle "ordonnées" en mouvement par un chaos carnavalistique.

Entre Le jeu de Mah jong paisible graphique et l'agitation des âmes soumises au couleur et aux musiques rythmées.

 

Overview Description :

Mystical;

Here is a boradcast pictures from Carnaval of Tournai 2019

Also original pictures from China

 

This is an one minute intro (1 minute) Still waiting the official release of that track

a golden age of music. E.T. Mensah and his Tempos competed with Jerry Hansen and The Ramblers band who were more in the vein of King Bruce's Black Beats. The Professional Uhuru Dance Band featured the guitar dexterity of Stan Plange. The GBC Band roughed it up with The Revellers, Railway Dance Band and the Nigerian Boradcasting Corporation Band.

 

The Sierra Leone Heartbeats, fronted by Geraldo PIno had set up shop in Ghana after the coup and found a receptive audience for their brand of soul music - echoes of Motown were in the air

 

Drum Magazine Ghana 1969

in the newsroom of al jazeera's arabic channel

at the al jazeera broadcast center in doha, qatar

memorial listing the names of slain journalists in the compound of al jazeera in doha, qatar

in the al jazeera arabic channel broadcast buiding in doha, qatar

on the right the burj qatar (qatar tower) which features a fascinating (adjustable?) steel mesh facade

the original drawing of the al jazeera logo that is now among the 5 most globally recognized brands

An image of the old TTTV logo was still just visible.

in a hallway in the al jazeera arabic channel building in doha, qatar

in the original Al-Jazeera newsroom

 

Former TTTV studios, City Road, Newcastle upon Tyne.

Aerospatiale AS355F1 Ecureuil II, G-NBEL - An Olympic Broadcast Service camera helicopter

 

Pictures taken during the 10KM open water swim for men at London 2012

Former TTTV studios, City Road, Newcastle upon Tyne.

Former TTTV studios, City Road, Newcastle upon Tyne.

The sunday morning Radio 6 Broadcast (simultaneously with radio 3) is always a WOMAD highlight for us. Here presenters Cerys matthews and Lopa Kathari present The east Pointers, Buika, Dom la Nena and Bafula. From a collection of photographs taken at WOMAD Charlton Park, 28th - 31st July 2016.

 

WOMAD stands for "World of Music, Arts and Dance". We traveled light with small cameras and just photographed what appealed to us rather than trying to capture the whole event and every act!

 

You will be missed Ernie.

 

Taken during the memorial for Ernie Harwell at Comerica Park in Detroit

 

Ernie Harwell, the Baseball Hall of Fame former broadcaster of the Detroit Tigers, sadly lost his battle with Cancer on May 4, 2010. He was a broadcaster for 55 years, 42 of them with Detroit. He was the only announcer ever to be traded for a player, as well as the first broadcaster to be inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame BEFORE he had retired. He was known for quite a few catchphrases ( "That one is long gone!" , "A fan from (insert any city here, but usually one not near Detroit) will be taking that foul ball home today.", "He stood there like the house by the side of the road, and watched it go by." ). I met him once at a Save Tiger Stadium Fanclub fund rasier and he was even nicer in person than I could evr imagine. He had a gift of making you feel like the most important person on the planet, very engaging, and despite all of his stories and memories ( he made the call of Bobby Thomson's "Shot heard round the world" in the 1951 National League Pennant game, as well as boradcasting 2 All-Star games and 3 World Series ) he was more interested in learning about you. He was one of a kind, a true gentleman, and will be sorely missed.

Former TTTV studios, City Road, Newcastle upon Tyne.

Former TTTV studios, City Road, Newcastle upon Tyne.

in the al jazeera new media office.

Former TTTV studios, City Road, Newcastle upon Tyne.

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