I listened to a WGBH Morning Story recently. I love these stories. I like how each story is a feature and they focus on one person. They people they find are so interesting and I always want to be able to talk to them more. I hope that someday I can have sources like that, and leave the audience wanting more.
Wednesday, April 21, 2010
Go Outside the Lines
I listened to a WGBH Morning Story recently. I love these stories. I like how each story is a feature and they focus on one person. They people they find are so interesting and I always want to be able to talk to them more. I hope that someday I can have sources like that, and leave the audience wanting more.
Dancing with the Stars
Wednesday, April 7, 2010
The Element of Surprise
Trusting Your Instincts
A few weeks ago I did a story about a store downtown Columbia called "The Butterfly Tattoo." Around the time of the story, Columbia was preparing for the annual "True/False Film Festival." I had heard through the grapevine that this gift shop was getting very involved in the film festival. This year, the store was in charge of all of the merchandise and checking in volunteers.
Wednesday, March 17, 2010
Help Coming From The Smallest Places
My last story was about the Audrain-Mexico County chapter of the Red Cross. This chapter is the smallest one in Missouri. I started the story by going to a rather different fundraiser they were having. I then followed up with a couple interviews in the Mexico headquarters.
Food for Thought
I recently listened to a story from "All Things Considered" called "Must Hear: Rules For Eating." It caught my attention because it was under the food category, and I was curious to see what it said now that I'm trying to eat healthier.
Wednesday, March 3, 2010
Ideas from Others
Olympic Influence
I can't get over the story I just did. It was so much fun to shoot! First, let me start way back 16 years ago. When I was five, I started ice skating. I did solo competitions, and synchronized skating as well. Figure skating is my passion, the one thing I feel like I can do when I need to get away from everything. I don't really get to skate as much any more, because the closest ice arena is a half hour away.
Wednesday, February 17, 2010
Finding Inspiration in Different Places
I recently watched a documentary called “The Ninth Floor” on Mediastorm.org. I really wasn’t sure what to expect when it started. It almost seemed to resemble and episode of “Intervention,” which drew me to it. I don’t know why, and I wish I knew why people have something inside them that draws them into to watching people who are misbehaving or doing bad things.
That is why I started to watch it, as bad as it may sound to say. This story was beyond incredible though. I wish there were words to describe its beauty. Just a series of images placed together, you never see anyone on a video, that simple. I say it’s simple, but I know it’s not. You wouldn’t see me walking around with a still camera getting the images that Jessica Dimmock got.
The story really got me thinking though. I had to turn my head away at times because it was just so hard to watch. What happens if I’m asked to do a story about something that is too difficult? How will I handle it? It also made me wonder about the people she found. These three people opened themselves up like I’ve never seen in a story before. How do you find those people who are just so willing to let loose in front of a camera and be themselves, whether it’s good or bad? In every story I’ve done, I’ve been lucky enough to find sources who will help me and say the things I’m hoping they’ll say, but they would never be willing to let me follow them around and get as intimate into their lives as Dimmock.
The story is a reminder of how much learning I still have to do. Yes, I’m fairly far along in college, but learning never ends. After I graduate and get my first job, I will still be learning so much. It will never end. All you can do is strive to be better, and have that story that people look at and think, “Wow, I could never do anything like that, I’m not talented enough.” I think truthfully, we are all talented enough, we just have to find that right story or source to connect to in order to truly tell a good, deep story the way Dimmock did.
Tuesday, February 16, 2010
Candy Shop Crunch Time
Valentine’s Day. What is there to say about it? Love, romance, flowers and chocolates. This is the day where everything and everyone sweet and in love goes out to profess their love to the world. But what about the gifts? Does anyone even care where they come from, or what other people had to go through in order to provide for them?
Over the weekend, I did a story about a small candy store in Fulton, MO. I wanted to go behind the scenes, so to speak, and see what goes in to making Valentine’s Day the confectionary holiday that it is.
Diane Branch is the owner of Sweet Temptations candy store. I asked plenty of questions about candy and the most popular during Valentine’s Day and during the year, and her story about opening the shop. While all of the answers were very interesting, one really surprised me.
Branch has dipped more than 1,000 strawberries in chocolate. 1,000 strawberries. I can’t even imagine what that looks like. They are all hand dipped and then hand decorated. Diane had been getting to her store around 5 in the morning all week in order to have all of the strawberries ready.
This story was kind of frustrating for me. My whole idea going into the story was to focus on how busy candy stores are the day before Valentine’s Day. When I called to set up my interview, Branch said that she was going to be very busy and wouldn’t be able to do an interview until after the store closed. She decided to keep the store open until 5:30, so I said I would be there around 4:15, so I had 45 minutes to get video of all the people in the store, and then stay after to do an interview with the owner. I thought it seemed pretty logical.
My timing would have worked out perfectly, except I didn’t realize that word never got around town that Branch was staying open later. Everyone thought that the store was closing, so they came by 3:30. So now, instead of having a candy shop full of customers, I have an empty one that has one customer at the end of the day.
Now I’ll have to focus my story on making chocolate covered strawberries and the owner herself, instead of the hustle and bustle of February 13. It’s frustrating, but I think it will still turn out well. Well, at least, I hope it does!