Prior to joining the SFSU faculty, Zettl worked at KOVR (Stockton-Sacramento) and as a producer-director at KPIX, the CBS affiliate in San Francisco, where he participated in a variety of CBS and NBC network television productions. He is also a member of the Broadcast Legends
Title | : | Video Basics 7 |
Author | : | |
Rating | : | 4.64 (374 Votes) |
Asin | : | 1111344469 |
Format Type | : | Paperback |
Number of Pages | : | 448Pages |
Publish Date | : | 2014-8-27 |
Language | : | English |
Prior to joining the SFSU faculty, Zettl worked at KOVR (Stockton-Sacramento) and as a producer-director at KPIX, the CBS affiliate in San Francisco, where he participated in a variety of CBS and NBC network television productions. He is also a member of the Broadcast Legends of the NATAS Northern California Chapter. His previous CD-ROM version won several prominent awards, including the Macromedia People's Choice Award, the New Media Invision Gold Medal for Higher Education, and Invision Silver Medals in the categories of Continuing Education and Use of Video. About the Author Herbert Zettl is a professor emeritus of the Broadcast and Electronic Communication Arts Department at San Francisco State University (SFSU), where he led the Institute of International Media Communication and received the California State Legislature Distinguished Teaching Award and the Broadcast Education Association's Distinguished Education Service Award. . Because of his outstanding contributions to the television profession, Zettl was elected to the prestigious Silver Circle of the
His numerous articles on television production and media aesthetics have appeared in major media journals worldwide, and he also developed an interactive DVD-ROM -- Zettl's VideoLab 4.0 (Cengage Learning). He is the author of VIDEO BASICS, TELEVISION PRODUCTION HANDBOOK and SIGHT SOUND MOTION, which are translated into several languages and published internationally. Lecturing extensively at universities and professional broadcast institutions both in the United States and abroad, Zettl has presentedMeeting the need for a briefer book, this text distills comprehensive video instruction so that it can be covered in a single semester. A more conceptual framework leads students from the idea (what to create) to the image (how to create) on video.. The book moves students from video concepts and processes to production tools and techniques and, finally, to the production environment (studio and field, inside and outside) and its effects. Herbert Zettl draws on his expertise and field experience to bring you the seventh edition of VIDEO BASICS, the handiest and most authoritative, current, and technically accurate student guide to video production availableI'm loving reading the inside scoop of what happened to this family and how. The family entertained Napa Valley for decades with their quarrels, lawsuits, affairs, extravagant bashes, etc. You might find yourself creating a superhero, a doctor or a judge as you continue to connect the dots over the photographs. Townes House is the wonderful and uplifting tale of Mrs. The book is beautifully written about the real story of the author's relationship with her students. Rather, this reads as quite the love story, infused as much by warmth and devotion as by professional interests. Not a terrible book but I'd like to see an update including newer cameras or dslr techniques.. I really did too! If you are a cat fan you should really check it out.. A well-researched book on the Mondavi family of Napa Valley. How hard it must have been for him after working his way to the top of the industry.. Well written book and great description of an innovative and important program.. This is a terrific history of the Mondavi family and the rise and fall of its wine empire. The author gives us a moving and picturesque picture of this remarkable ahead-of her time forward-thinking woman, Mrs. She’s also nine and loves, coloring, dot-to-dots and activity books. every teacher should read this book. I was thrilled (especially since it is easier for little hands if you tear them out)! You can draw on the
No comments:
Post a Comment