Preparing for a parade
Suzie Harrison
Saturday’s 37th annual Laguna Beach Patriot’s Day Parade will be one
to watch.
Over and over, again.
This year’s parade, “Freedom’s Promise,” will be the first that
Laguna Beach High School students will capture on video for
broadcast.
The quartet responsible is Scott Brown, 18, Claire Vogel, 16,
Henry Plant, 18, and Hunter Poller, 16.
“We found out through our teacher that Cox would no longer be
filming,” Henry said.
The parade, of course, is a big deal for Laguna Beach, one of the
biggest community events of the year, one that involves people of all
ages.
Claire explained that officials at Cox Communications asked the
school if students wanted to do it. All the students except Scott
were in the first-year video production class last semester taught by
Pam MacKay.
“Through our weekly broadcasts people thought of us, they thought
we were good,” Henry said. “We worked with Scott writing scripts. He
wasn’t in the class, but Scott had these great ideas. I worked with
Scott writing scripts and he did commercials.”
Scott called himself the adopted member.
“I’m interested in film and want to go to film school and direct,”
Scott said. “I had worked with Claire and Henry a lot, and when they
asked me to do this, of course I jumped at the chance. I had
scheduling conflicts so I couldn’t take the class.”
At one of their meetings in preparation for the parade coverage,
talk was of logistics and equipment. Henry pointed out the largest of
the cameras and explained that they had to get a grant for that
camera, because it is industrial quality and it can’t be bought at
local stores.
In the video room at the high school, there are four different
size video cameras that will be stationed at different locations
during the parade.
Editing will be done on Macintosh G-4 computers.
“We’ll use the Panasonic for the industrial set up at the Fire
Station,” Claire said. “Then the other ones will be separately used
for our own interviews.”
She added that they are responsible for some of the news
broadcasts at the school, which happens every Thursday and Friday.
“There’s a TV in every room,” Claire said. “We get an assignment
-- news, an interview or activity that’s going on in the school. In
that group, you have to come up with an idea for it that people will
want to see.”
After they are done filming, they do editing on the computer,
which they do as a team together. Next it’s scheduled and then
finally it is broadcast.
“It’s a good experience because you learn how to edit quickly,
under deadlines,” Claire said.
Henry said that the problem is that the school only has that one
course with no advanced class.
“Even though we were excelling, we can’t go any further, Henry
said. “Because we are not in class, with the parade, it makes it
difficult to get equipment. So basically we are doing it on our own
time, not class time. Most of what we discuss we have to do after
school.”
Claire said it’s been tough because they have other activities and
some have jobs after school, but they have been meeting every day to
prepare.
All of them will be considered producers and editors of the
parade, but Scott will do more of the script writing and organizing
while the others will be using the cameras. They will have to fill
two hours on TV with a 20-minute pre-show.
“I feel privileged, I love filming and editing,” Claire said.
“It’s a neat step, it’s nice that they asked. It will be the first
experience and it will be good to see it on TV.”
Scott’s commercials are said to have a cult following around the
school because of his sense of humor and use of abstract comedy. He
is thrilled to be a part of the team responsible for the parade.
They have everything planned from the interviews to the time-lapse
video of everyone showing up at the football field for the parade to
begin.
“During the coverage there are four cameras. We’ll be shooting
around City Hall with a camera on both sides of the street and on the
second floor of the Fire Station,” Henry said. “All the pre-show
filming is around the high school.”
All four said they are all looking forward to this great
opportunity. They’ll be meeting in the production room at 7 a.m.
Saturday to make sure everything is in order to capture this year’s
parade.
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