With new studios, Great american country looks and sounds good

Jun 1, 2008 12:00 PM, BY MICHAEL GROTTICELLI


             
Great American Country’s 2000sq-ft main production studio “A” features Thomson Grass Valley LDK 4000 HD 1080i cameras and three custom sets.

Great American Country’s 2000sq-ft main production studio “A” features Thomson Grass Valley LDK 4000 HD 1080i cameras and three custom sets.

Scripps Networks' Great American Country (GAC) is one of the top-rated country music channels, and its new file-based, HD-compatible facility is receiving quite a few raves.

The country music network started in the 1980s, with most of its programs taped in Colorado and elsewhere across the country, and has grown considerably ever since.

After years of taping its programs in a variety of studios and production companies, the GAC network is now settled into a new two-story production studio in downtown Nashville. The 8000sq-ft facility was completed earlier this year, under the guidance of system integrator Broadcast Integration Group of Atlanta. It used a design developed internally by a Scripps Networks and GAC project team led by Kevin Kritch, the network's vice president of production operations.

The sleek new studios were built inside an existing recording studio and administrative office. The plant is completely designed and engineered for HD production, but currently distributes its programs in 4:3 SD only. The plan is to move to full HD sometime in 2009 when many of the other Scripps shows will convert to HD as well.

HD-ready production

The 2000sq-ft main production studio “A” features four Thomson Grass Valley LDK 4000 HD 1080i cameras and three custom sets. The sets are fixed to the building's main walls, yet they can be adjusted, and parts of the walls and panels can be moved or replaced to accommodate different scenic designs and art direction for other shows and live music performances. Philadelphia broadcast scenic veterans Artists at Work designed and constructed the colorful and flexible sets.

The main video control room has a Thomson Grass Valley Kayak 2.5 M/E switcher, Miranda Kaleido-X multi-image display, Chyron HyperX2 CG and RTS/Telex Cronus intercom.

The main video control room has a Thomson Grass Valley Kayak 2.5 M/E switcher, Miranda Kaleido-X multi-image display, Chyron HyperX2 CG and RTS/Telex Cronus intercom.

The main video control room features a Thomson Grass Valley Kayak 2.5 M/E switcher, Miranda Kaleido-X multi-image display system, Chyron HyperX2 SD/HD two-channel CG system and XClyps SD/HD two-channel clip player, and RTS/Telex Cronus intercom. An adjoining audio recording room includes a Solid State Logic (SSL) C132 digital audio console with Digidesign Pro Tools HD. There's also an NVISION router that moves both AES/stereo audio and video signals around the facility, all supported by dozens of Miranda signal conversion cards.

The smaller studio “B” is outfitted with three JVC GY-HD250U cameras with Fujinon lenses on robotic pedestals with Telemetrics custom heads. There is a small control room, complete with a Wheatstone E-6 audio console and a Broadcast Pix Slate integrated production system that serves up two playout channels of uncompressed video.

The studio cameras record to HDV tape or output an HD-SDI feed directly to an onboard hard drive or external server. The cameras can be easily moved to the larger studio, plugged into the facility's fiber and be immediately available to the main control room production switcher.

Tapeless workflow

The facility employs an audio recording studio and audio post room managed by an SSL C132 digital audio console with Digidesign Pro Tools HD software.

The facility employs an audio recording studio and audio post room managed by an SSL C132 digital audio console with Digidesign Pro Tools HD software.

Field material is ingested into a 10TB Avid ISIS SAN managed by the company's Interplay asset management system. Studio material is directly ingested into an Avid AirSpeed.

The post facilities on the second floor boast a tapeless workflow, enabling editors to begin working on a clip within 15 seconds of ingest. The post department relies on three Avid Media Composer Adrenaline NLE systems and a clip-based StorageTek SL500 archive library, with 48 data tapes that hold about 800GB each. The interface between the ISIS and the SL500 is an SGL FlashNet. All of the edit systems can share clips coming from the storage system, which streamlines post-production sessions and makes editors significantly more productive. Completed programs and production footage is all archived. This enables the creative team to easily repurpose material, which it does on a continuous basis.



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