Broadcast Studio in Rarig
The following is an computer-generated summary of the video transcript.
One of my favorite academic buildings is called Roehrig, which is located on West Bank, very busy building that's mostly occupied by theatre and performance arts, as well as the broadcasting production side of communications. In rare, there are multiple studios that any student in L. A is allowed to reserve and used for whatever needs they might have. There are classes that specifically trained you and teach you how to use our largest studio, which is a TV production studio with very high end equipment for an introduction. The type of equipment we have in there from a full audio booth, too. It's very similar Teo, a control booth you would see at a large stadium like in the NFL, or that you would see any multi camera TV productions, soldiers, a news broadcast or possibly a game show in this studio. There's also a full prop closet with stuff that students have donated faculty of donated and the theater arts department That stuff they weren't using anymore donated. There's walls to create a fake set, you know, couches, a fake refrigerator, lots of fake plants and foliage and students are also allowed to bring in whatever extra materials they might wish to use. After taking this introduction broadcasting class, I actually began working in the studio with a service called Lattice. I was a t a for the class, so I made sure everyone was using the equipment properly. I got paid toe help out with this class and help these students in this introduction class. Whether you're, you know, in a communications video production class or not up in this equipment, check out their high end computers with editing software that you're allowed to use. They have thes really nice, beautiful light kids that are actually battery operated. You could go out to a field in the middle of nowhere. You seize the lights late at night, the last upto, like sometimes 16 hours, depending on the full charge or how high intensive later using them on. It's just a really great resource for students, whether they use it for classes or just for their personal, you know, making a video for fun. It's really cool that we have the opportunity to learn to use this equipment in a area where it's, you know, not do or die.