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Multiple-camera setup

The multiple-camera setup, multiple-camera mode of production, multi-camera or simply multicam is a method of filmmaking and video production. Several cameras—either film or professional video cameras—are employed on the set and simultaneously record or broadcast a scene. It is often contrasted with a single-camera setup, which uses one camera.

Diagram showing a multicam setup

Description

Generally, the two outer cameras shoot close-up shots or "crosses" of the two most active characters on the set at any given time, while the central camera or cameras shoot a wider master shot to capture the overall action and establish the geography of the room.[1] In this way, multiple shots are obtained in a single take without having to start and stop the action. This is more efficient for programs that are to be shown a short time after being shot as it reduces the time spent in film or video editing. It is also a virtual necessity for regular, high-output shows like daily soap operas. Apart from saving editing time, scenes may be shot far more quickly as there is no need for re-lighting and the set-up of alternative camera angles for the scene to be shot again from the different angle. It also reduces the complexity of tracking continuity issues that crop up when the scene is reshot from the different angles.

Drawbacks include a less optimized lighting setup that needs to provide a compromise for all camera angles and less flexibility in putting the necessary equipment on scene, such as microphone booms and lighting rigs. These can be efficiently hidden from just one camera but can be more complicated to set up and their placement may be inferior in a multiple-camera setup. Another drawback is in the usage of recording capacity, as a four-camera setup may use (depending on the cameras involved) up to four times as much film (or digital storage space) per take compared with a single-camera setup.

A multiple-camera setup will require all cameras to be synchronous to assist with editing and to avoid cameras running at different scan rates, with the primary methods being SMPTE timecode and Genlock.[2]

Film

Most films use a single-camera setup,[3] but in recent decades larger films have begun to use more than one camera on set, usually with two cameras simultaneously filming the same setup. However, this is not a true multiple-camera setup in the television sense.

Some films will run multiple cameras, perhaps four or five, for large, expensive and difficult-to-repeat special effects shots, such as large explosions. Again, this is not a true multiple-camera setup in the television sense as the resultant footage will not always be arranged sequentially in editing, and multiple shots of the same explosion may be repeated in the final film—either for artistic effect or because the different shots can appear to show different explosions since they are taken from different angles.[clarification needed]

Television

 
Live news, such as Al Jazeera, will use multiple cameras for their broadcasts.

Multiple-camera setups are an essential part of live television.[4] The multiple-camera method gives the director less control over each shot but is faster and less expensive than a single-camera setup. In television, multiple-camera is commonly used for light entertainment, sports events, news, soap operas, talk shows, game shows, variety shows, and some sitcoms, especially ones filmed before a live studio audience.

Multiple cameras can take different shots of a live situation as the action unfolds chronologically and is suitable for shows which require a live audience. For this reason, multiple camera productions can be filmed or taped much faster than single camera. Single-camera productions are shot in takes and various setups with components of the action repeated several times and out of sequence; the action is not enacted chronologically so is unsuitable for viewing by a live audience.

In multiple-camera television, the director creates a line cut by instructing the technical director (vision mixer in UK terminology) to switch between the feeds from the individual cameras. This is either transmitted live, or recorded. In the case of sitcoms with studio audiences, this line cut is typically displayed to them on studio monitors. The line cut might be refined later in editing, as often the output from all cameras is recorded, both separately (a technique known as "ISO" recording). The camera currently being recorded to the line cut is indicated by a tally light controlled by a camera control unit (CCU) on the camera as a reference both for the talent and the camera operators, and an additional tally light may be used to indicate to the camera operator that they are being ISO recorded.

A sitcom shot with a multiple-camera setup will require a different form of script to a single-camera setup.[5]

History and use

The use of multiple film cameras dates back to the development of narrative silent films, with the earliest (or at least earliest known) example being the first Russian feature film Defence of Sevastopol (1911), written and directed by Vasily Goncharov and Aleksandr Khanzhonkov.[6] When sound came into the picture multiple cameras were used to film multiple sets at a single time. Early sound was recorded onto wax discs that could not be edited.

The use of multiple video cameras to cover a scene goes back to the earliest days of television; three cameras were used to broadcast The Queen's Messenger in 1928, the first drama performed for television.[7] The first drama performed for British television was Pirandello’s play The Man With the Flower in His Mouth in 1930, using a single camera.[8] The BBC routinely used multiple cameras for their live television shows from 1936 onward.[9][10][11]

United States

Before the pre-recorded continuing series became the dominant dramatic form on American television, the earliest anthology programs (see the Golden Age of Television) utilized multiple camera methods.[citation needed]

Although some claim the multiple-camera setup was pioneered for television when producer and co-star, Desi Arnaz, associate producer, Al Simon, and cinematographer Karl Freund of Desilu Productions used it to film I Love Lucy in 1951; other producers had been using the technique for several years.[12]

According to Thomas Schatz, Jerry Fairbanks is the first to develop a 16mm multi-camera system to film a made-for-TV show when he used it to shoot the pilot episode of Public Prosecutor in 1947.[13] Fairbanks went on to film 26 episodes for a planned network premiere in September 1948, but it was pulled from the schedule, and the show didn't air until 1951.[14][15]

Assisted by producer-director Frank Telford, Fairbanks also used a multi-camera system to film Edgar Bergen’s Silver Theater which aired in the 1949-50 season.[16] He continued working with this system for the pilot of Truth or Consequences in April 1950. When Al Simon joined Ralph Edwards Productions in producing Truth or Consequences several months later, he improved the system by substituting 35mm film for 16mm film and adding a more sophisticated intercom system.[17]

The technique was used for the CBS comedy The Amos 'n Andy Show, which was filmed at the Hal Roach Studios and was on the air four months before I Love Lucy.[citation needed]

In 1949, Ray Culley of Cinécraft Productions, a sponsored film studio, filmed the first TV infomercial, Home Miracles for the 1950s, for Vitamix using the technique.[18] Culley also used the technique for three made-for-television TV series featuring Louise Winslow, a pioneer in sewing, cooking, and craft "how-to" programs on daytime television - Adventures in Sewing (1950), Food Is Fun (1950), and Kitchen Chats (1950).[19] A 1950 article in Printers Ink, “Three-Camera Technique used to shoot TV film,” discussed Cinécraft’s innovative production style.[20] In 1966, the studio made a film, “Cinécraft, Inc. Multi-camera Filming Technique Demonstration,” showing how the technique works and describing rear screen projection and teleprompters, other innovative technologies of the era [21]

In the late 1970s, Garry Marshall was credited with adding the fourth camera (known then as the "X" Camera, and occasionally today known as the "D" Camera) to the multi-camera set-up for his series Mork & Mindy. Actor Robin Williams could not stay on his marks due to his physically active improvisations during shooting, so Marshall had them add the fourth camera just to stay on Williams so they would have more than just the master shot of the actor.[22][23] Soon after, many productions followed suit and now having four cameras (A, B, C and X/D) is the norm for multi-camera situation comedies.[citation needed]

Sitcoms shot with the multiple camera setup include nearly all of Lucille Ball's TV series, as well as Mary Kay and Johnny, Our Miss Brooks, The Dick Van Dyke Show, The Mary Tyler Moore Show, All in the Family, Three's Company, Cheers, The Cosby Show, Full House, Seinfeld, Family Matters, The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air, Mad About You, Friends, The Drew Carey Show, Frasier, Will & Grace, Everybody Loves Raymond, The King of Queens, Two and a Half Men, The Big Bang Theory, Mike & Molly, Last Man Standing, Mom, 2 Broke Girls, The Odd Couple, One Day at a Time, Man with a Plan, Carol's Second Act, and Bob Hearts Abishola. Many American sitcoms from the 1950s to the 1970s were shot using the single camera method, including The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet, Leave It to Beaver, The Andy Griffith Show, The Addams Family, The Munsters, Get Smart, Bewitched, I Dream of Jeannie, Gilligan's Island, Hogan's Heroes, and The Brady Bunch. The earliest seasons of Happy Days were filmed using a single-camera setup before the series transitioned to a multi-camera setup (which also occurred alongside its increase in popularity). These did not have a live studio audience, and by being shot single-camera, tightly edited sequences could be created, along with multiple locations and visual effects such as magical appearances and disappearances. Multiple-camera sitcoms were more simplified but have been compared to theatre work due to their similar setup and use of theatre-experienced actors and crew members.

While the multiple-camera format dominated US sitcom production in the 1970s and 1980s,[citation needed] there has been a recent revival of the single-camera format with programs such as Malcolm in the Middle (2000–2006), Scrubs (2001–2010), Entourage (2004–2011), The Office (2005–2013), My Name Is Earl (2005–2009), Everybody Hates Chris (2005–2009), It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia (2005–present), 30 Rock (2006–2013), Glee (2009–2015), Modern Family (2009–2020), The Middle (2009–2018), Community (2009–2015), Parks and Recreation (2009–2015), Raising Hope (2010–2014), Louie (2010–2015), The Goldbergs (2013-present), Black-ish (2014-2022), Superstore (2015–2021), Silicon Valley (2014-2019), Schitt's Creek (Canada) (2015-2020), American Housewife (2016–present), and Young Sheldon (2017–present).

United Kingdom

The majority of British sitcoms and dramas from the 1950s to the early 1990s were made using a multi-camera format.[24] Unlike the United States, the development of completed filmed programming, using the single camera method, was limited for several decades.[citation needed] Instead, a "hybrid" form emerged using (single camera) filmed inserts, generally location work, which were mixed with interior scenes shot in the multi-camera electronic studio. It was the most common type of domestic production screened by the BBC and ITV. However, as technology developed, some drama productions were mounted on location using multiple electronic cameras. Many all-action 1970s programs, such as The Sweeney and The Professionals were shot using the single camera method on 16mm film. Meanwhile, by the early 1980s, the most highly budgeted and prestigious television productions, like Brideshead Revisited (1981), had begun to use film exclusively.

By the later 1990s, soap operas were left as the only TV drama being made in the UK using multiple cameras.[citation needed] Television prime-time dramas are usually shot using a single-camera setup.

See also


References

  1. ^ Scott Schaefermeyer (25 July 2012). Digital Video BASICS. Cengage Learning. pp. 189–. ISBN 978-1-133-41664-7.
  2. ^ Norman Medoff; Edward J. Fink (10 September 2012). Portable Video: ENG & EFP. CRC Press. pp. 65–. ISBN 978-1-136-04770-1.
  3. ^ Battaglio, Stephen (July 8, 2001). "TELEVISION/RADIO; Networks Rediscover the Single-Camera Sitcom". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved May 12, 2017.
  4. ^ Andrew Utterback (25 September 2015). Studio Television Production and Directing: Concepts, Equipment, and Procedures. CRC Press. pp. 163–. ISBN 978-1-317-68033-8.
  5. ^ Miyamoto, Ken (21 June 2016). "Single-Camera vs. Multi-Camera TV Sitcom Scripts: What's the Difference?". ScreenCraft. Retrieved 13 June 2020.
  6. ^ "В Салюте в День российского кино прошел показ немого фильма "Оборона Севастополя" под живое музыкальное сопровождение - Фильмы - КультурМультур". kulturmultur.com (in Russian). Retrieved 2017-12-10.
  7. ^ "Queen's Messenger". Early Television Foundation and Museum. Retrieved 13 June 2020.
  8. ^ Richard G Elen. . Baird: The Birth of Television. Transdiffusion. Archived from the original on 2010-04-17.
  9. ^ "Alexandra Palace". www.earlytelevision.org. Retrieved 13 June 2020.
  10. ^ "The Birth of Live Entertainment and Music on Television, November 6, 1936". History TV: The Restelli Collection. Retrieved 13 June 2020.
  11. ^ "Telecasting a Play", New York Times, March 10, 1940, p. 163.
  12. ^ Jon Krampner, "Myths and Mysteries Surround Pioneering of 3-Camera TV", Los Angeles Times, July 29, 1991.
  13. ^ Thomas Schatz, Boom and Bust: American Cinema in the 1940s, University of California Press, 1999, p. 436. ISBN 9780520221307.
  14. ^ "Bristol-Myers Mulls 'Prosecutor' Series", Billboard, August 27, 1949, p. 10.
  15. ^ Stanley Rubin, "A (Very) Personal History of the First Sponsored Film Series on National Television", E-Media Studies, vol. 1, issue 1 (2008).
  16. ^ "" Time, March 6, 1950.
  17. ^ Jon Krampner, Myths and Mysteries Surround Pioneering of 3-Camera TV : Broadcasting: A popular belief is that Desi Arnaz created the technique for ‘I Love Lucy’ in 1951, but evidence of the system dates to 1947. Los Angeles Times, July 29, 1991
  18. ^ “'But wait! There’s more.' Papa Bernard and the first TV Infomercial." ACADEMIA Letters
  19. ^ Copies of many Louise Winslow TV programs are posted on the Hagley Library web site
  20. ^ Dodge Barnum, “Three-Camera Technique Used To Shoot TV Film,' Printers Ink, 1950
  21. ^ A copy of the film is posted on the Hagley Library website
  22. ^ Anders, Charlie Jane (December 2, 2015). "Mork and Mindy Was One of the Most Unlikely Miracles in the History of Television". Gizmodo. Retrieved May 12, 2017.
  23. ^ Kantor, Michael; Maslon, Laurence (2008). Make 'Em Laugh: The Funny Business of America. Grand Central Publishing. p. 340. ISBN 978-0-446-55575-3.
  24. ^ Walker, Tim (February 2, 2011). "The return of the sitcom". The Independent. Retrieved May 12, 2017.

multiple, camera, setup, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, ju. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Multiple camera setup news newspapers books scholar JSTOR June 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message The multiple camera setup multiple camera mode of production multi camera or simply multicam is a method of filmmaking and video production Several cameras either film or professional video cameras are employed on the set and simultaneously record or broadcast a scene It is often contrasted with a single camera setup which uses one camera Diagram showing a multicam setup Contents 1 Description 2 Film 3 Television 4 History and use 4 1 United States 4 2 United Kingdom 5 See also 6 ReferencesDescription EditGenerally the two outer cameras shoot close up shots or crosses of the two most active characters on the set at any given time while the central camera or cameras shoot a wider master shot to capture the overall action and establish the geography of the room 1 In this way multiple shots are obtained in a single take without having to start and stop the action This is more efficient for programs that are to be shown a short time after being shot as it reduces the time spent in film or video editing It is also a virtual necessity for regular high output shows like daily soap operas Apart from saving editing time scenes may be shot far more quickly as there is no need for re lighting and the set up of alternative camera angles for the scene to be shot again from the different angle It also reduces the complexity of tracking continuity issues that crop up when the scene is reshot from the different angles Drawbacks include a less optimized lighting setup that needs to provide a compromise for all camera angles and less flexibility in putting the necessary equipment on scene such as microphone booms and lighting rigs These can be efficiently hidden from just one camera but can be more complicated to set up and their placement may be inferior in a multiple camera setup Another drawback is in the usage of recording capacity as a four camera setup may use depending on the cameras involved up to four times as much film or digital storage space per take compared with a single camera setup A multiple camera setup will require all cameras to be synchronous to assist with editing and to avoid cameras running at different scan rates with the primary methods being SMPTE timecode and Genlock 2 Film EditMost films use a single camera setup 3 but in recent decades larger films have begun to use more than one camera on set usually with two cameras simultaneously filming the same setup However this is not a true multiple camera setup in the television sense Some films will run multiple cameras perhaps four or five for large expensive and difficult to repeat special effects shots such as large explosions Again this is not a true multiple camera setup in the television sense as the resultant footage will not always be arranged sequentially in editing and multiple shots of the same explosion may be repeated in the final film either for artistic effect or because the different shots can appear to show different explosions since they are taken from different angles clarification needed Television Edit Live news such as Al Jazeera will use multiple cameras for their broadcasts Multiple camera setups are an essential part of live television 4 The multiple camera method gives the director less control over each shot but is faster and less expensive than a single camera setup In television multiple camera is commonly used for light entertainment sports events news soap operas talk shows game shows variety shows and some sitcoms especially ones filmed before a live studio audience Multiple cameras can take different shots of a live situation as the action unfolds chronologically and is suitable for shows which require a live audience For this reason multiple camera productions can be filmed or taped much faster than single camera Single camera productions are shot in takes and various setups with components of the action repeated several times and out of sequence the action is not enacted chronologically so is unsuitable for viewing by a live audience In multiple camera television the director creates a line cut by instructing the technical director vision mixer in UK terminology to switch between the feeds from the individual cameras This is either transmitted live or recorded In the case of sitcoms with studio audiences this line cut is typically displayed to them on studio monitors The line cut might be refined later in editing as often the output from all cameras is recorded both separately a technique known as ISO recording The camera currently being recorded to the line cut is indicated by a tally light controlled by a camera control unit CCU on the camera as a reference both for the talent and the camera operators and an additional tally light may be used to indicate to the camera operator that they are being ISO recorded A sitcom shot with a multiple camera setup will require a different form of script to a single camera setup 5 History and use EditThe use of multiple film cameras dates back to the development of narrative silent films with the earliest or at least earliest known example being the first Russian feature film Defence of Sevastopol 1911 written and directed by Vasily Goncharov and Aleksandr Khanzhonkov 6 When sound came into the picture multiple cameras were used to film multiple sets at a single time Early sound was recorded onto wax discs that could not be edited The use of multiple video cameras to cover a scene goes back to the earliest days of television three cameras were used to broadcast The Queen s Messenger in 1928 the first drama performed for television 7 The first drama performed for British television was Pirandello s play The Man With the Flower in His Mouth in 1930 using a single camera 8 The BBC routinely used multiple cameras for their live television shows from 1936 onward 9 10 11 United States Edit Before the pre recorded continuing series became the dominant dramatic form on American television the earliest anthology programs see the Golden Age of Television utilized multiple camera methods citation needed Although some claim the multiple camera setup was pioneered for television when producer and co star Desi Arnaz associate producer Al Simon and cinematographer Karl Freund of Desilu Productions used it to film I Love Lucy in 1951 other producers had been using the technique for several years 12 According to Thomas Schatz Jerry Fairbanks is the first to develop a 16mm multi camera system to film a made for TV show when he used it to shoot the pilot episode of Public Prosecutor in 1947 13 Fairbanks went on to film 26 episodes for a planned network premiere in September 1948 but it was pulled from the schedule and the show didn t air until 1951 14 15 Assisted by producer director Frank Telford Fairbanks also used a multi camera system to film Edgar Bergen s Silver Theater which aired in the 1949 50 season 16 He continued working with this system for the pilot of Truth or Consequences in April 1950 When Al Simon joined Ralph Edwards Productions in producing Truth or Consequences several months later he improved the system by substituting 35mm film for 16mm film and adding a more sophisticated intercom system 17 The technique was used for the CBS comedy The Amos n Andy Show which was filmed at the Hal Roach Studios and was on the air four months before I Love Lucy citation needed In 1949 Ray Culley of Cinecraft Productions a sponsored film studio filmed the first TV infomercial Home Miracles for the 1950s for Vitamix using the technique 18 Culley also used the technique for three made for television TV series featuring Louise Winslow a pioneer in sewing cooking and craft how to programs on daytime television Adventures in Sewing 1950 Food Is Fun 1950 and Kitchen Chats 1950 19 A 1950 article in Printers Ink Three Camera Technique used to shoot TV film discussed Cinecraft s innovative production style 20 In 1966 the studio made a film Cinecraft Inc Multi camera Filming Technique Demonstration showing how the technique works and describing rear screen projection and teleprompters other innovative technologies of the era 21 In the late 1970s Garry Marshall was credited with adding the fourth camera known then as the X Camera and occasionally today known as the D Camera to the multi camera set up for his series Mork amp Mindy Actor Robin Williams could not stay on his marks due to his physically active improvisations during shooting so Marshall had them add the fourth camera just to stay on Williams so they would have more than just the master shot of the actor 22 23 Soon after many productions followed suit and now having four cameras A B C and X D is the norm for multi camera situation comedies citation needed Sitcoms shot with the multiple camera setup include nearly all of Lucille Ball s TV series as well as Mary Kay and Johnny Our Miss Brooks The Dick Van Dyke Show The Mary Tyler Moore Show All in the Family Three s Company Cheers The Cosby Show Full House Seinfeld Family Matters The Fresh Prince of Bel Air Mad About You Friends The Drew Carey Show Frasier Will amp Grace Everybody Loves Raymond The King of Queens Two and a Half Men The Big Bang Theory Mike amp Molly Last Man Standing Mom 2 Broke Girls The Odd Couple One Day at a Time Man with a Plan Carol s Second Act and Bob Hearts Abishola Many American sitcoms from the 1950s to the 1970s were shot using the single camera method including The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet Leave It to Beaver The Andy Griffith Show The Addams Family The Munsters Get Smart Bewitched I Dream of Jeannie Gilligan s Island Hogan s Heroes and The Brady Bunch The earliest seasons of Happy Days were filmed using a single camera setup before the series transitioned to a multi camera setup which also occurred alongside its increase in popularity These did not have a live studio audience and by being shot single camera tightly edited sequences could be created along with multiple locations and visual effects such as magical appearances and disappearances Multiple camera sitcoms were more simplified but have been compared to theatre work due to their similar setup and use of theatre experienced actors and crew members While the multiple camera format dominated US sitcom production in the 1970s and 1980s citation needed there has been a recent revival of the single camera format with programs such as Malcolm in the Middle 2000 2006 Scrubs 2001 2010 Entourage 2004 2011 The Office 2005 2013 My Name Is Earl 2005 2009 Everybody Hates Chris 2005 2009 It s Always Sunny in Philadelphia 2005 present 30 Rock 2006 2013 Glee 2009 2015 Modern Family 2009 2020 The Middle 2009 2018 Community 2009 2015 Parks and Recreation 2009 2015 Raising Hope 2010 2014 Louie 2010 2015 The Goldbergs 2013 present Black ish 2014 2022 Superstore 2015 2021 Silicon Valley 2014 2019 Schitt s Creek Canada 2015 2020 American Housewife 2016 present and Young Sheldon 2017 present United Kingdom Edit The majority of British sitcoms and dramas from the 1950s to the early 1990s were made using a multi camera format 24 Unlike the United States the development of completed filmed programming using the single camera method was limited for several decades citation needed Instead a hybrid form emerged using single camera filmed inserts generally location work which were mixed with interior scenes shot in the multi camera electronic studio It was the most common type of domestic production screened by the BBC and ITV However as technology developed some drama productions were mounted on location using multiple electronic cameras Many all action 1970s programs such as The Sweeney and The Professionals were shot using the single camera method on 16mm film Meanwhile by the early 1980s the most highly budgeted and prestigious television productions like Brideshead Revisited 1981 had begun to use film exclusively By the later 1990s soap operas were left as the only TV drama being made in the UK using multiple cameras citation needed Television prime time dramas are usually shot using a single camera setup See also Edit3D reconstruction from multiple images Camera rig Cinecraft Multi camera Filming Technique Demonstration Circle Vision 360 Light stage is a device used for capturing the shape texture and reflectance of a target usually for the purposes of virtual cinematography Light stages are usually a combination of and multiple camera and structured light techniques and additionally polarizers are included to find the subsurface scattering component of the target s skin Omnidirectional camera Single camera setupReferences Edit Scott Schaefermeyer 25 July 2012 Digital Video BASICS Cengage Learning pp 189 ISBN 978 1 133 41664 7 Norman Medoff Edward J Fink 10 September 2012 Portable Video ENG amp EFP CRC Press pp 65 ISBN 978 1 136 04770 1 Battaglio Stephen July 8 2001 TELEVISION RADIO Networks Rediscover the Single Camera Sitcom The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved May 12 2017 Andrew Utterback 25 September 2015 Studio Television Production and Directing Concepts Equipment and Procedures CRC Press pp 163 ISBN 978 1 317 68033 8 Miyamoto Ken 21 June 2016 Single Camera vs Multi Camera TV Sitcom Scripts What s the Difference ScreenCraft Retrieved 13 June 2020 V Salyute v Den rossijskogo kino proshel pokaz nemogo filma Oborona Sevastopolya pod zhivoe muzykalnoe soprovozhdenie Filmy KulturMultur kulturmultur com in Russian Retrieved 2017 12 10 Queen s Messenger Early Television Foundation and Museum Retrieved 13 June 2020 Richard G Elen Baird versus the BBC Baird The Birth of Television Transdiffusion Archived from the original on 2010 04 17 Alexandra Palace www earlytelevision org Retrieved 13 June 2020 The Birth of Live Entertainment and Music on Television November 6 1936 History TV The Restelli Collection Retrieved 13 June 2020 Telecasting a Play New York Times March 10 1940 p 163 Jon Krampner Myths and Mysteries Surround Pioneering of 3 Camera TV Los Angeles Times July 29 1991 Thomas Schatz Boom and Bust American Cinema in the 1940s University of California Press 1999 p 436 ISBN 9780520221307 Bristol Myers Mulls Prosecutor Series Billboard August 27 1949 p 10 Stanley Rubin A Very Personal History of the First Sponsored Film Series on National Television E Media Studies vol 1 issue 1 2008 Flight to the West Time March 6 1950 Jon Krampner Myths and Mysteries Surround Pioneering of 3 Camera TV Broadcasting A popular belief is that Desi Arnaz created the technique for I Love Lucy in 1951 but evidence of the system dates to 1947 Los Angeles Times July 29 1991 But wait There s more Papa Bernard and the first TV Infomercial ACADEMIA Letters Copies of many Louise Winslow TV programs are posted on the Hagley Library web site Dodge Barnum Three Camera Technique Used To Shoot TV Film Printers Ink 1950 A copy of the film is posted on the Hagley Library website Anders Charlie Jane December 2 2015 Mork and Mindy Was One of the Most Unlikely Miracles in the History of Television Gizmodo Retrieved May 12 2017 Kantor Michael Maslon Laurence 2008 Make Em Laugh The Funny Business of America Grand Central Publishing p 340 ISBN 978 0 446 55575 3 Walker Tim February 2 2011 The return of the sitcom The Independent Retrieved May 12 2017 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Multiple camera setup amp oldid 1105721960, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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