
News Director Andrea Parquet-Taylor, Director/Producer Chris
Bolanz and Technology Reporter Tom Lawrence celebrate the
completion of a goal. |
The staff at
WRAL-TV has been working incredible hours for the past several months
to complete the newscast's transition to digital. Staffers learned
their way around brand new equipment, most of which is so new that
the instruction manuals have not yet been written. Operators, directors
and producers forged their own way through over 189 miles of cables
and wires and endless rehearsals. The end result was WRAL-TV's transition
to its digital newsroom on Sunday, January 28, 2001, for the 11:00pm
newscast.
Now the studio
is in full celebration mode. WRAL held a VIP reception on Monday,
January 29, for an impressive list of special guests from CBS, Panasonic
and Sony, executives who helped make the transition possible. About
50 guests poured into the studio for a 5:30pm reception and then
a live view of the 6:00pm all-HD newscast. The guests then got a
tour of the facility. CBC's own brass attended the reception as
well, with special guest WRAL HDTV Digital Engineer Luther Ritchie,
the original HD engineer on the project from the beginning.
Another celebration
took place on Tuesday, January 30, a thank you party for the WRAL
staff. The event went from 5:30-8:30pm in the ballroom at the Warehouse
restaurant in downtown Raleigh. Employees danced, played pool and
enjoyed hors d'oeuvres and beverages and the opportunity to just
let their hair down with their co-workers after so many weeks of
hard work. WRAL offered the party "as a small token of appreciation
for all the hard, and often heroic, work that has gone into the
launch of our HDTV news service…a reception for Channel 5 employees
to relax, upconvert some stories, downconvert the problems, and
celebrate the accomplishment."
The well-deserved
celebrations had been a long time in the making. WRAL-TV received
the first experimental HDTV license in the country on June 19, 1996.
Teams worked around the clock to transmit the first digital signal
on July 23 that same year; the WRAL team did what should have taken
eight to ten weeks in only 34 days. Now, only a few years later,
WRAL's dream has come true. CBC Vice President of HD John Greene,
one of the original members of the WRAL conversion team, said, "After
envisioning high definition television for over ten years, and actually
working on the development of it for over five years, it was a real
celebration for WRAL to begin producing the nation's first and only
full HDTV newscasts. Even CBS was impressed enough to send executive
staff to Raleigh for the production."
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