Thursday, June 19, 2008

Has life changed a great deal in a year and a half.

Has life changed a great deal in a year and a half. I came to ICB in January of 2007 not sure of where I wanted to go. I held a degree in marketing and was doing well. But it just wasn't making me happy at all.
I was one of those people who heard the ad from Matt Abbatacola on the Score and thought how great would it be to talk about sports all day. It was the dream that we all had meeting those guys from the score.
At first, I was discouraged, but realized that radio has always been where my passion lied, and I could not live without at least trying.
So I started as an intern with Mancow in Chicago.....That gave me a great idea as to how a talk show worked (especially in the entertainment industry). I spent about a month and a half there and learned a great deal from them. But I needed something different.
I started interning at Metro Networks/Shadow News and Traffic in June of 2007 doing whatever they asked of me there. After my three month internship was up in the news department, the Program Director (and ICB Grad) offered me a second internship to learn traffic. There was no promise of a job, but to stay in the minds of people there was important. After graduating from ICB in November, I continued my internship until a job opened there or somewhere. On December 17th, I found out from the higher up's that I was going to be hired on as a part time editor/on-air talent. I started with 15 fixed hours a week and have since moved up to between 25-30 hrs a week. I've also been a fill in on Sirius Satellite Radio for the Chicago and Houston Markets.
What's really exciting (and at the same time made me extremely nervous) is that I will be doing Traffic Reports for 560 AM WIND and WMBI from 9-11 on Thursday, June 18th. It will be the first time my name will be on the AM/FM dial where I am not an intern.
Something else I will touch on is that although being finished with school, I acceptedd an internship with WGN's Newsroom. The experience there (working full time) was nothing short of amazing. You work hands on producing national sound bytes throughout the day as well as getting stories ready from reporters who are on the scene. The one newscast I will never forget was when two of my soundbytes I got from an Obama press conference as well as the Pope's mass in Washington, as well as sound I recorded from two separate reporters made up the first 4 stories of a morning newscast on 720.
So as you can see, the last six months have been nothing short of amazing. I definitely recommend listening to everything that they tell you at ICB. Getting into this industry is tough, but being in the industry is an absolute rush that I hope continues. Thank you for all of your help ICB!
-- Daniel Frank

Friday, May 30, 2008

Robert Wilke - On Field Emcee Portland Beavers



Robert Wilke, who just graduated months ago - is the new field emcee of the Portland Beavers. The Portland Beavers are a minor league baseball team, representing Portland, Oregon in the Pacific Coast League. It is currently the Triple-A affiliate for the San Diego Padres.
Congrats to Robert - nothing like working for the Beavers!
Love that Logo too! Can you get me a hat?

Brian Fetting wanted it BAD

I came to Illinois Center for Broadcasting in January of 2007 as a burned out special education teacher looking to change my life. I initially thought I wanted to get into sports radio, but a valuable internship at ESPN 1000 made me realize that was not where my skills and interests were best put to use.

I had always been a fan of WGN Morning News in Chicago, and I got the greatest thrill of my professional career to date when I got an internship there in August of 2007. In fact, Larry Potash himself called me to interview me. That in itself was a thrill. Because I was willing to do anything and everything - including getting up daily at 3 am for the trek to the north side of the city - I got to take part in a lot of things that eventually made me realize that this was where I wanted to be. I saw and got to be a part of all aspects of a newsroom, including things like writing stories...editing two different "Friday Dances," which were played multiple times on-air... researching the weirdest stories imaginable for "Larry's World"... having to dress up in characters and be in their little skits... and booking guests and producing segments. Little did I know that waking up at 3 am would soon be considered "sleeping in."

I graduated in November, and still kept going to my internship every day. I ended up with nearly 1000 hours in about 5 months, not bad. I stopped counting after a while. And less than one week after my internship ended, I was suddenly packing my truck and moving to Green Bay.

I started a job as morning news producer at NBC 26 in Green Bay in December of 2007. I produce the 9 a.m. and the noon news. I absolutely love it - it's the perfect combination of writing and booking guests. Being in a small market, I get a taste of doing it all in a newsroom. I am my own assignment editor, writer, sometimes editor and director too! I can sight in and operate a satellite truck and make my own graphics when I have to. And yes, I now get up at around 1:30 every morning to do this job. It can be a pressure-cooker-and-a-half sometimes, but it's all been worth it. Television producing is the most fun I've ever had.

I may have put in all those internship hours, but I probably put in nearly as many looking for and applying for any and every job in TV news. Relentless work was the key in the end. It doesn't start and end with class at all; many of my classmates are some of my best friends now. These friendships were forged by countless hours at a tavern down the street planning and creating our projects... spitballing ideas... encouraging each other. Your career in broadcasting starts and ends with the phrase "how bad do you want it?"

If you ever have any questions about working in TV news, don't hesitate to contact me at bfetting@nbc26.com

Thursday, May 15, 2008

Latest First Jobs from Chicago

PLACEMENT ILLINOIS
THIS IS APRIL 2008 ONLY! ALREADY PLACED IN BROADCASTING - CONGRATULATIONS!
This represents just a sample of those who have recently graduated from our program at the Illinois Center for Broadcasting and already found success in broadcasting:
Local Radio
  • Ryan Fitzgibbons Board Operator WLS Radio
  • Rebecca Portwood Promotions NINE FM
  • Andrew Dornfeld Promotion/Sales Open Road Radio
  • Dwayne Bernstein Event DJ Master Music, Inc
  • Kendall Green Administration WJJG Radio
  • Krista Hatcher Morning Show Co-Host 103.3 WKFR
  • Daniel Carrillo Board Op STAR 105.5
  • Scott Kostohryz V.O. Announcer Open Road Radio
  • Nicholas Sullivan Broad Op/Production Emmis Q101/WLUP
  • Anthony Kopp Production Y103 FM
  • Brenda Irving Production WSRB Soul 106.3
National TV and Radio
  • Scott Vamey Sports Editor/Photog WDJT/CBS58
  • Barron E. Woods Production Asst Judge Mathis Show
  • Nicholas Calderon Promotions WPBF-TV
  • Herman Coats On Air Sportscaster Chicago Sportscast.com
  • Rashandi Lewellen DJ Performer DJ/Just Jokes
  • Ivory Harris Videographer Illinois Seahawks Football
  • Cubie Holiday Audio Engineer Orange County Center
  • Kevin Kelley Reporter KQTV ABC
  • Bill Hanke Videographer PSIMEDIA
  • Rebecca Portwood On Air Host WDCB-TV
  • Gerardo Gallegos Videographer COMCAST
  • Lydia Perez Associate Produce The Steve Wilko Show
  • Christopher Paszkiet Videographer/Editor IL Institute of Technology
  • Carissa Briscoe Editing/Videographer Alfred Windom Production
  • Shavonne Owens DJ/Host blogtalkradio.com
  • Mitchell Leach II On Camera Talent TV FOX Entertainment

Wednesday, May 14, 2008

A Typical Day In The Life Of A MOTIVATED Broadcast Student



By Jeremy Bloom.
3:30 am... my alarm clock goes off... I reluctantly get up, I was at my night job only four short hours before. Take a shower, get in my car, and drive to the 102.3 XLC studio in Waukegan, Illinois.

4:25 am... the morning show jocks Jimmy Novak and Jen Stephens arrive. I'm their assistant and it's my first day doing this specific job at the station (more on that in a bit). We get our coffee, they go into the studio, and I gather sound clips off the Internet for the show.

Around 5:30 am Jimmy tells me that he doesn't need any more sound clips and to come into the studio with him. I eventually am going to have a career on air with radio or television... I spend the rest of the morning hanging out and speaking on air with Jimmy and Jen!!!

The show ends at
9:00 am, I help them with promos and post show duties till about 10:00; off to promotions where I am a also an assistant. I help my director as well as the program director till roughly 2:00pm. Hit the road again 45 miles to The Illinois Center For Broadcasting in Lombard, IL.

I spend the next two hours producing, recording, editing, and sending a sample voice over to a customer of mine from the restaurant I work at. The V/O is for a committee interested in using my voice in a presentation that will be shown to the World Olympic Committee in efforts to have the games here in 2016.

Off to Wheaton for an organizational meeting for the Chicago Bandits. The Bandits are a women's professional softball team, and ICB is co-oping with the Softball Channel to produce all of the Bandit's games as well as a weekly recap show, I'm co-anchor! The meeting ends around
9:00 pm.

Destination, Lincolnshire, IL (60 miles away). I help my friend move some heavy furniture around his apartment, of course he can't decide where it goes it takes much longer than expected.
12:30 am (the next day)... I finally arrive home, but before bed... laundry. 1:30 am... LIGHTS OUT!!!

6:30 am... my alarm clock goes off... I reluctantly get up... Time for school! 21 hour days? 3 hours sleep? All for the chance to speak on air??? ABSOLUTELY!!!

Mike Kittl gets hired to do National Radio Commercials



"You've got a voice for Radio," everyone told Mike Kittl. So finally after enrolling at the Illinois Center for Broadcasting back in August - Mike was on the road to radio. While interning at WIND Newstalk 560 AM doing production, he was asked to start doing voiceover commercials.

He went from doing local commercial production and voiceover to doing National commercials for Pepboys. Listen to some of his work HERE, HERE and HERE!

Mike states, "I never thought I would be working so fast, especially at my internship! Doing an internship is definitely one of the keys to working in the industry!"

***UPDATE! Mike has been really busy - and is the new Producer of Restaurant Chicago - go here for more