With a world class faculty and up-to-date production facilities, Hunter College’s Department of Film & Media Studies offers two undergraduate programs of study and an MFA degree in Integrated Media Arts. [more...]
IMA alumna Jing Wang’s documentary “A Winter with Delivery Workers” is part of the Museum of City of New York’s Cycling in the City exhibit.
“A Winter with Delivery Workers” New York, Documentary 2019 Director/Editor: Jing Wang Producer: Do Lee, Dorothy Le Suchkova, Hellen Ho Videographer: Wei Liang, Jing Wang, Katalina Gutierrez
Great Big Story photojournalist Jonathan O’Beirne loves telling stories with camera, and by all measures he’s gotten pretty good at it with some of his stories viewed more than 10 million times. CNN launched the global media company Great Big Story in 2015 to tell stories that transcend borders. O’Beirne joined the team nearly three years ago and attributes his success to a few simples rules that he shared with Professor Sissel McCarthy’s Studio News Production students.
His top tip is to always monitor your audio. “Sound is more critical than video, and people cannot tolerate poor sound,” O’Beirne says. He even showed students how to set the audio on channel 1 to manual and channel 2 to auto in case something goes wrong on channel 1– an insurance policy that has saved him many times.
O’Beirne has a mental checklist that he goes through for every scene he’s shooting. First, do a manual white balance and then shoot a sequence: wide, medium, tight and then six other shots from different angles and perspectives, all held for at least 25 seconds so you have handles, the extra footage before and after a clip’s in-point and out-point.
He also urged students to use their tripods for every shot. “That’s the difference between an amateur and a professional,” says O’Beirne, adding that he’s not a huge fan of zooming, and that it’s always better to walk your camera closer to a shot. Same thing for panning—let what you’re shooting walk into the frame.
Congrats to Film & Media student Jules Rico! Jules received the Presidential Award at graduation.
Jules Rico is a graduate of Hunter College where she majored in Documentary/ TV Production and Women/Gender Studies. While her time at Hunter Jules created and hosted the popular radio show Rainbow Notes NYC, and has showcased her photography at a number of independent exhibitions including Strictly New York. Additionally, Jules worked on the Apollo Theater documentary as an archival post-production intern for Roger Ross Williams Productions. Other collaborations include a number of independent, films such as “Gabrielle”, “Serial Killer In Harlem” and award-winning “Nevertheless, She Auditioned”.