
THINKING YOU ARE SPECIAL is one thing. Having
an hour-long, prime-time television documentary about you proves it.
On Oct. 30, right between "Jeopardy" and "Monday Night Football,"
Cincinnati's ABC affiliate spent an hour showing the trials and triumphs
of a typical day at the University of Cincinnati. (The show was also rebroadcast
on Jan. 14.) Rather than highlighting strictly newsworthy events, the channel
9 TV special looked at real life ... and all that came with it.
That meant some students expressed admiration for their professors, while
others poked fun at them in a good-natured way; one moment, students were
epitomizing frustration, and the next, they proudly proclaimed their accomplishments.
Ultimately, UC was portrayed at its best, and the realism lent credibility.
Eleven video crews had crisscrossed campus for 24 hours on May 31, from
midnight to midnight, taping everything from surgery and dance classes to
basketball practice and the Clifton bar scene. Producers Jim Friedman, DAAP
'78, and Polly Carroll, MA (A&S) '98, chose about 20 subjects to film
from more than 200 suggestions received from UC colleges and divisions.
In the end, 50 hours of video tape were edited down to a mere 45 minutes.
Separate interviews were conducted for audio tracks, and local news anchor
Clyde Gray narrated the finished product.
For those who missed the show, it is available on video at the UC Bookstores.
The documentary was the first in a series of seven "One Day" shows
that WCPO plans to broadcast highlighting interesting institutions and people
in Cincinnati, says series producer Friedman, head of the Blind Squirrels
Production Group. Returning to campus to film was exciting for the industrial-design
alumnus, though working on campus was not a new experience.
"I never really left," he says. "I've been on faculty. I
received the outstanding DAAP alumnus award a few years ago, and I lecture
whenever I can. I love my connection with the university. I just wish there
was more of it."
Winner of at least 11 International Film Festival awards, a national Gabriel
Award and 45 regional Emmys, Friedman says he and Carroll worked 44 hours
straight surrounding the day of the shoot, preparing, supervising and wrapping
up all the shooting. Although university photographers did not attempt to
duplicate that dedication, "Horizons" magazine did have a crew
of eight photographers following most of the video teams around on May 31.
No one was able to hang in for the entire 24 hours, but we did shoot sunrise,
sunset and 1,500 exposures in between. On the following pages, we share
a few of our favorites.
Next page | "One Day" photo gallery
Links:
Check out more photos, an audio clip and a video clip.
Read more about producers Jim Friedman and Polly Carroll.
Order the video from University Bookstores, 513-556-1800, (toll-free): 1-888-232-7227.
photo/Dottie Stover