_______ F T .. ... .ti v 'C ...... Page 4-Sunday, October 15, 1978-The Michigan Daily Dollyin, camera one ..". By Shelley Wolson rHE CAMERA dollys in for a planning, the split-second blueprint of medium shot of the bedridden man. every speaker's words and each shot of He looks into the glass eye of the the camera. camera and quietly says, "I have acute The script is carefully penciled in leukemia and when I first found out I with the director's commands and had the disease, I didn't even know how laced with the producer's creativity. to spell it. I had no idea what it was." After several rehearsals, the crew is Another camera zooms in for a close- alerted and the countdown begins. The up. The director in the control room director rushes through a series of barks to the switcher, "Ready "ready" commands and finally snaps two.. . take two." The middle-aged, to the floor manager, "Cue talent!" terminally ill patient continues, "I had The director has absolute control of never been sick in my entire life. My the studio throughout the taping. He first question to the doctor was how must watch four monitors - one apiece long do I have? In all my life, the har- for the cameras, one for preview, and dest thing I ever had to do was get in my one that reveals what is being recorded car, go home, walk up those stairs and on tape - in addition to giving cues for say to my wife,'I have leukemia." slides, films, balop cards, graphics, "Ready one.. . take one." talent, and cameras. The camera cuts to.a medium shot of a doctor who begins her part in the AT THE FINAL cut, the floor manag- documentary, "Whenever I tell a ter- tier signals to the talent frantically minally ill patient..." with a slashed throat imitation. But for These are the opening shots of one of the producer, the taping is the one time the many educational programs he can sit back and watch the fruit of produced by the University Television his meticulous plans come to life on Center. Entitled "To Die with Dignity; videotape. to Live with Grief," the film offers an Executive producer Al Slote is quick insight into the dilemmas faced by ter- to point out that he works with a corps minally ill patients. The program is of talented professionals. Yet those 4designed to subtly inform the viewer, professionals point to Slote as the main- and help him understand the questions stay of the Television Center's niche of these patients must ask. creativity. What the viewer sees on his television He is constantly in motion, searching screen is footage of interviews. But for new ideas for yet another program. what the viewer does not see are the Slote has earned a reputation around time-consuming, intricate steps of the center as the man who is always searching for the right face, the right Shelley Wolson is a Daily night idea. One time Slote raced out of a bar- bershop with a towel around his neck because he'd seen a little old woman Daily photos by Brad Benjamin walking by he thought would be and Maureen O'Malley perfect for the film he was working on. He ran after her yelling, 'Lady, would you like to be on TV?' Slote recently finished "To Die with Dignity; to Live with Grief" and his next projects include a program on nuclear power and another illustrating the problems of the elderly. And although the TV Center staff strives to produce quality television in its own right, it does so primarily for the pur- poses of education. HERE'S LESS emphasis on broad- casting, with more on instruc- tion," says Slote who writes children's books as a sideline. 'Hopefully, the same quality we put into a broadcast - ;y television programs - we put into in- struction. TV is the professor's tool." Programs produced by the center are sent via cable to over 800 stations across the U.S., while approximately 25 commercial broadcasting stations carry University programs. "We send teachers out via TV," says Slote, "the University of Michigan faculty is teaching nationwide." Slote has produced hundreds of shows for the center and is well-known as the creator of the trigger film, a series of one minute educational films designed to initiate disussion. Slote says the ky to the trigger film is that there "is no in- =yY "formation in them, they're all emotion." He has produced nationally distributed trigger films on topics such as driver education for the Highway Safety Research Institute and the problems of the aged for the Inter-- national Center for Social Gerontology. Thne Mivchigan Ugiy-auiuuy,