That's not what fireworks are actually. When the Deceleration of Independence was adopted on July 2nd 1776, John Addams declared that this day would be celebrated by future generations with illuminations, as they were then called, or in other words fireworks, amiong other things. There was no simulating of battle intended just celebration. The Battle of Baltimore didn't take place until the war of 1812, and Americans had been celebrating July 4th, New Years, Christmas and other holidays with fireworks before and since.

On 7/11/2011 6:43 PM, Joseph McAllister wrote:
It's all fish paper. Creative control of a staged production. What are the 
fireworks? A simulation of a battle we happened to win. 150 years ago, or maybe 
199 years ago, or 235 years ago.

It's no worse than what the TV crews do before a ball game, or football game. They send a 
"color crew" out to capture the feel, the essence of the area, a few monuments, 
people playing in a park. traffic on the roads. Usually on a Thursday, while they had the 
rest of the crew setting up for the game. They recorded all these shots, for re-use, so 
they didn't have to do them again, as long as they had enough variety to cover the 
weather prevalent at the time.

My experience is limited to the old days, when the parks had no pre-wiring in 
them, so heavy cables had to be dragged up the camera positions throughout, 
attached to the semi-truck with the producer/director's consoles inside. 
Meanwhile the phone company linesmen connected 100 pairs or more from trucks 
punch downs to the poles near the truck (s) to get the signal to the local 
affiliate for distribution. It didn't matter what network was airing the game. 
The trucks were rented by a consortium to share the signal as needed. No 
satellites back then to beam it up to. Then the cameras, 100+ lbs apiece, had 
to be carefully dollied up to the heavy duty tripods they set up on the plywood 
platforms built over a section of 3 or 4 seats. These were tube cameras, and 
were quite delicate. They soon switched to solid state Japanese cameras, which 
were a little smaller, weighed half of the old models, and provided a solid and 
less contrasty signal, which gave better color.

Now I think they just show up with their own cameras to drop into the steel 
tripods already there (maybe the cameras are left as well) and a medium sized 
van with satellite dish, maybe a second or third dish set up beside the truck. 
Send the talent up to their cubbyhole somewhere in the stadium, and they are 
gold.


On Jul 9, 2011, at 15:09 , drd1...@gmail.com wrote:

It's definitely a slippery slope. They should at least say what they are doing 
and acknowledge that it's artistry and not simply news.
-----Original Message-----
From: "P. J. Alling"<webstertwenty...@gmail.com>
Sender: pdml-boun...@pdml.net
Date: Sat, 09 Jul 2011 11:51:05
To: Pentax-Discuss Mail List<pdml@pdml.net>
Reply-To: Pentax-Discuss Mail List<pdml@pdml.net>
Subject: In Photographic news Apparently reality wasn't good enough for CBS

So?  It was entertainment and not news, but CBS altered the broadcast
images of the Boston Fireworks...

http://articles.boston.com/2011-07-08/ae/29752504_1_fireworks-show-quincy-market-footage
Joseph McAllister
Lots of gear, not much time

http://gallery.me.com/jomac




--
Where's the Kaboom?  There was supposed to be an Earth-shattering Kaboom!

        --Marvin the Martian.



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