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UNO Television offers education, experience for student workers

Taylor Muller

Issue date: 8/7/07 Section: Arts & Leisure
Complete with a fully-functional control room, students who work at UNO Television get the true hands-on experience of working at a TV studio by filming, producing and directing shows that are broadcast weekly. (photo by Stephenie Conley)
Complete with a fully-functional control room, students who work at UNO Television get the true hands-on experience of working at a TV studio by filming, producing and directing shows that are broadcast weekly. (photo by Stephenie Conley)
[Click to enlarge]
Taylor Muller
News Editor

That person sitting next to you in class might be a local television celebrity.
At least, that could be the case if they work at UNO Television, the student-crewed television studio on campus.
With instruction and assistance from several faculty members of the College of Communicaion, Fine Arts and Media, the student crew "learns all aspects of a television production," according to Mark Dail, the studio's production coordinator.
"UNO Television, with the aid of students, creates programming of special interest for the campus and the Omaha area," said Jim Adams, UNO Television's assistant general manager.
Students, generally from within CCFAM, are hired to produce a wide variety of programming that the department broadcasts to Omaha and occasionally statewide.
Many members of the student crew said the experience they gain from working at a full-time television studio on campus is incredibly useful in securing a job in the real world.
"I know right now there are [at least] six members of our student crew who also work for the news stations around town," said David Healy, a senior student crewmember. "It really is a great springboard for the professional job market."
Healy said the hands-on experience he has gained while working at UNO Television is priceless.
"It's not just, 'do this because I say so,'" Healy said. "It's 'do this and this is why and this is how it turns out.'"
Janelle Hislop, a senior studio art major and crew member, originally considered being part of the crew as"an at school job that helps me get money," but said she soon found it could also teach her a lot.
Adams said one of the nearly half-dozen shows the studio has put on the air over the last year is a weekly live newscast called the Omaha News. Written, filmed and anchored by UNO students, the show is a chance for students to put their classroom knowledge to the test.
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