A very special thank you is in order for the Broadcast Legends group, in covering Hank Schoepp's memoir spanning his 29-year career in Media. Broadcast Legends was formed to "celebrate with colleagues from the years when Broadcasting was fun!" Of the many organizations formed within the media industry, this one is quite a coup for us to have their attention. They truly are the ones who can relate to Schoepp's memoirs the most- and the time and place where the industry was, "way back when."
Thank you again.
You can visit the Broadcast Legends website here.
You can visit Hank Schoepp's website here.
Purchase your copy of Shoot First: Code of the News Cameraman for $4.99
Shoot First: Code of the News Cameraman
Tuesday, March 22, 2016
Saturday, October 24, 2015
Resource for Future Journalists
Media and Educational professionals recommend "Shoot First: Code of The News Cameraman" as reading material for any future Journalist looking to enter the field of news gathering. This book is a great resource with a behind-the-scenes look at the working relationships, conditions and demands of reporters, cameramen and camerawomen, before today's technology changed so many aspects of the mechanics of their careers. Still the human element remains the same.
Hank Schoepp, author, shares his stories behind the stories during his career that spanned nearly 30 years in the San Francisco Bay Area (1968-1997), a significant period in television news history. Schoepp's memoir includes some of the biggest headlines of this era, including: tear gas attacks during student protests and rioting at U.C. Berkeley; the kidnapping saga of Patricia Hearst; the search for a vanishing school bus, driver and 26 children in Chowchilla, California; the aftermath of a mass suicide of over 900 people in Jonestown, Guyana; and rushing to the city hall murder scene of a San Francisco mayor and supervisor.
Click Here to order now
ARE YOU AN EDUCATION PROFESSIONAL? We'd love to hear from you. If you are interested in reviewing the book for your Journalism students, we would love to send you a hard back version of the book (while supplies last), or credit for your first online copy. Please contact hankschoepp@embarqmail.com for more information.
Hank Schoepp, author, shares his stories behind the stories during his career that spanned nearly 30 years in the San Francisco Bay Area (1968-1997), a significant period in television news history. Schoepp's memoir includes some of the biggest headlines of this era, including: tear gas attacks during student protests and rioting at U.C. Berkeley; the kidnapping saga of Patricia Hearst; the search for a vanishing school bus, driver and 26 children in Chowchilla, California; the aftermath of a mass suicide of over 900 people in Jonestown, Guyana; and rushing to the city hall murder scene of a San Francisco mayor and supervisor.
Click Here to order now
ARE YOU AN EDUCATION PROFESSIONAL? We'd love to hear from you. If you are interested in reviewing the book for your Journalism students, we would love to send you a hard back version of the book (while supplies last), or credit for your first online copy. Please contact hankschoepp@embarqmail.com for more information.
Thursday, September 10, 2015
Unsung Heros Behind News Gathering....The Quarterbacks of TV News
Reporter Mike Lee reviews "Shoot First: Code of the News Cameraman"
Hank has written a compelling must read adventure behind the scenes of the golden age of television news when The San Francisco Bay Area was a national crucible of global social change. "Shoot First: Code of the News Cameraman." Is also a much needed insight into the unsung heroes of news gathering, the folks behind the cameras. Hank himself has been in the trenches and his memoirs show us that despite what you might think of the so-called harsh values of tv news there are caring and intelligent people out there, like Hank and his colleagues, whose instant judgments under pressure, and often amid danger, are sensitive, artistic and hugely important to our perception of the world we see on the news. To put it another way, think of football's top quarterbacks: They are under pressure to get the ball in the air. Camera men and women, along with their sound recordists, are the quarterbacks of tv news. They put the ball in play, making many crucial decisions every minute the clock is running, sometimes while under fire. Without them we would be a much poorer democracy. I recommend "Shoot First: Code of the News Cameraman' for anyone thinking of picking up a camera and becoming a video journalist. For the rest of us, it is a darn fine account of the humanity behind the lens.
Mike Lee
Reporter KHFI TV Austin 1964-65, WFAA TV Dallas 66-68, KPIX TV San Francisco 68-75; CBS News 1975-80; ABC News 1980-2006
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Veteran news cameraman Hank Schoepp, who worked for San Francisco’s KPIX/CBS 5 from 1968-1997, has released a memoir on Amazon.com. His book covers a one-of-a-kind view on some of the biggest stories of that time.
"Shoot First: Code of The News Cameraman" is a page-turner for all readers from Journalism students, to Bay Area historians, to anyone interested in a behind the scenes view of some of the biggest stories of that era.
See "Shoot First: Code of The News Cameraman" on Amazon
Visit Author Hank Schoepp's website
Mike Lee
Reporter KHFI TV Austin 1964-65, WFAA TV Dallas 66-68, KPIX TV San Francisco 68-75; CBS News 1975-80; ABC News 1980-2006
----------------------
Veteran news cameraman Hank Schoepp, who worked for San Francisco’s KPIX/CBS 5 from 1968-1997, has released a memoir on Amazon.com. His book covers a one-of-a-kind view on some of the biggest stories of that time.
"Shoot First: Code of The News Cameraman" is a page-turner for all readers from Journalism students, to Bay Area historians, to anyone interested in a behind the scenes view of some of the biggest stories of that era.
See "Shoot First: Code of The News Cameraman" on Amazon
Visit Author Hank Schoepp's website
Saturday, July 11, 2015
"Old Cameramen Never Die; They Just Lose Their Loops."
"Shoot First" Author Hank Schoepp welcomes email comments and questions about his memoir! In fact it's quite fun to read feedback from different age groups and folks associated, or not, with broadcast journalism. We have another reader who has submitted an interesting question for Hank. Coles Powell asks, "In the book, you say 'Old cameramen never die; they just lose their loops.' Can you explain more what you mean by this expression?"
Schoepp:
At KPIX, the advent of shooting the news on videotape came in 1980. Prior to that time, the medium was 16 millimeter film. So, before I can answer your question properly, I must first dispel the myth of what makes motion pictures move. The common misconception is that these images are exposed onto film while it moves behind a camera lens. If this were true, there would be no images for the eye to see, only a blur. Because the film doesn't really move behind the lens. It stops, or halts ever so briefly, at the rate of twenty-four times a second, recording a serious of still photos, like tiny snapshots, on that narrow strip of film, thereby creating the illusion of pictures that move.
In order to insure the precision of a mechanical process which creates the motion picture illusion, also known as "intermittent action", a fluid supply and release of film must occur just before and after it passes behind the camera lens. This happens with slack, where the film forms a small loop just above the lens and another one just below. If something unexpected happens, such as film fed from inside one magazine chamber holds back or film taken-up inside the other chamber lags behind, the loops above and below the lens collapses and the camera jams.
Powell:
But how does this relate to the "old cameramen" you refer to?
Schoepp:
And for this part of my answer you would either have to be from my generation or a young student of history. If so, you would recall that President Harry Truman fired General Douglas McArthur as commander of our troops during the Korean War because he publically disagreed with the president over his foreign policy. The last sentence of the general's farewell speech, delivered to the cadets at West Point, stated that: "Old soldiers never die; they just fade away." Well, some of those old cameramen whom I have known and worked alongside over the years may have died but they will never fade away, not from my own memory. I can only imagine that the very least misfortune bestowed upon them on Judgment Day would have been for them to lose their loops.
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Do you have an question or comment for Hank? Click here to email him personally.
Haven't read the book yet? You can get it here on Amazon.
Schoepp:
At KPIX, the advent of shooting the news on videotape came in 1980. Prior to that time, the medium was 16 millimeter film. So, before I can answer your question properly, I must first dispel the myth of what makes motion pictures move. The common misconception is that these images are exposed onto film while it moves behind a camera lens. If this were true, there would be no images for the eye to see, only a blur. Because the film doesn't really move behind the lens. It stops, or halts ever so briefly, at the rate of twenty-four times a second, recording a serious of still photos, like tiny snapshots, on that narrow strip of film, thereby creating the illusion of pictures that move.
In order to insure the precision of a mechanical process which creates the motion picture illusion, also known as "intermittent action", a fluid supply and release of film must occur just before and after it passes behind the camera lens. This happens with slack, where the film forms a small loop just above the lens and another one just below. If something unexpected happens, such as film fed from inside one magazine chamber holds back or film taken-up inside the other chamber lags behind, the loops above and below the lens collapses and the camera jams.
Powell:
But how does this relate to the "old cameramen" you refer to?
Schoepp:
And for this part of my answer you would either have to be from my generation or a young student of history. If so, you would recall that President Harry Truman fired General Douglas McArthur as commander of our troops during the Korean War because he publically disagreed with the president over his foreign policy. The last sentence of the general's farewell speech, delivered to the cadets at West Point, stated that: "Old soldiers never die; they just fade away." Well, some of those old cameramen whom I have known and worked alongside over the years may have died but they will never fade away, not from my own memory. I can only imagine that the very least misfortune bestowed upon them on Judgment Day would have been for them to lose their loops.
-------------
Do you have an question or comment for Hank? Click here to email him personally.
Haven't read the book yet? You can get it here on Amazon.
Thursday, May 28, 2015
Have Camera, Will Travel
Hank Schoepp, retired KPIX news cameraman, was based in the San Francisco Bay Area but his career often took him abroad. Schoepp has seen the world through a lens and brought back a myriad of images, a few from hell and one from heaven: Pope John Paul II in the Vatican, up close and personal.
Schoepp: "I had never been to Rome before, let alone the Vatican. In March of 1987, television station KPIX sent a news crew to profile Pope John Paul II, prior to his planned visit to the United States in September of the same year. Accompanying me as a working member of the press, the son of the head of the Vatican Communications Office was able to provide us with access to people and places which, until then, had not been observed through a camera lens. We were privileged to an exclusive coverage of news seldom, if ever, granted to other members of the press. Certainly, being in close proximity to someone best described as no ordinary man was one of them."
EXCERPT (Chapter 23: Have Camera, Will Travel) Once again, the Holy Father moved among those who had come to see and touch him, gesturing to all in his path with the Sign of the Cross. And, once again, I followed along with the camera and my Swiss Guard chaperone, as the pontiff approached a rostrum with a microphone. Then, just before stepping up to address the crowd, he paused for a moment to acknowledge a little girl who handed him a single flower. A beautiful child with olive skin and dark eyes, she couldn't have been much older than three or four years. Pope John Paul II reached down and lifted the child up, kissed her on the forehead and held her tightly in his arms, as if he might be holding onto God, which, of course, he was. For my part, that moment alone was worth the trip to Rome, to where all roads lead and this chapter ends.
Website
Shoot First: Code of the News Cameraman on Amazon
Email
Schoepp: "I had never been to Rome before, let alone the Vatican. In March of 1987, television station KPIX sent a news crew to profile Pope John Paul II, prior to his planned visit to the United States in September of the same year. Accompanying me as a working member of the press, the son of the head of the Vatican Communications Office was able to provide us with access to people and places which, until then, had not been observed through a camera lens. We were privileged to an exclusive coverage of news seldom, if ever, granted to other members of the press. Certainly, being in close proximity to someone best described as no ordinary man was one of them."
EXCERPT (Chapter 23: Have Camera, Will Travel) Once again, the Holy Father moved among those who had come to see and touch him, gesturing to all in his path with the Sign of the Cross. And, once again, I followed along with the camera and my Swiss Guard chaperone, as the pontiff approached a rostrum with a microphone. Then, just before stepping up to address the crowd, he paused for a moment to acknowledge a little girl who handed him a single flower. A beautiful child with olive skin and dark eyes, she couldn't have been much older than three or four years. Pope John Paul II reached down and lifted the child up, kissed her on the forehead and held her tightly in his arms, as if he might be holding onto God, which, of course, he was. For my part, that moment alone was worth the trip to Rome, to where all roads lead and this chapter ends.
Website
Monday, April 20, 2015
Excerpt: Confessed killler of Polly Klass
Author Hank Schoepp recalls the day he was assigned cameraman to shoot.
"On December 7, 1993, thirty-nine year-old Richard Allen Davis, who confessed to the abduction and murder of twelve year-old Polly Klass, was formally arraigned in the Sonoma County seat of Santa Rosa, California. Due to the high profile nature of the case, only one camera was allowed inside the courtroom," he said. "As the pool cameraman, I was assigned to capture through my lens the likeness of the defendant. And to this day, it's the one that lingers on."
Shoot First: Code of the News Cameraman book excerpt:
His face was full, ruddy, time-worn, or worn perhaps from bearing witness first-hand to pain and suffering he had caused. His beard, thick moustache and hair on his head was long, wavy and gray, and his eyes, though partially shielded behind horn-rimmed glasses, seemed no less cold or distant, looking nowhere and at nothing, if not inward to where he had been, at what he had done there and to whom, and without remorse. (Chapter 15: 207)
Read More excerpts from Shoot First: Code of the News Cameraman
About the Author
"On December 7, 1993, thirty-nine year-old Richard Allen Davis, who confessed to the abduction and murder of twelve year-old Polly Klass, was formally arraigned in the Sonoma County seat of Santa Rosa, California. Due to the high profile nature of the case, only one camera was allowed inside the courtroom," he said. "As the pool cameraman, I was assigned to capture through my lens the likeness of the defendant. And to this day, it's the one that lingers on."
Shoot First: Code of the News Cameraman book excerpt:
His face was full, ruddy, time-worn, or worn perhaps from bearing witness first-hand to pain and suffering he had caused. His beard, thick moustache and hair on his head was long, wavy and gray, and his eyes, though partially shielded behind horn-rimmed glasses, seemed no less cold or distant, looking nowhere and at nothing, if not inward to where he had been, at what he had done there and to whom, and without remorse. (Chapter 15: 207)
Read More excerpts from Shoot First: Code of the News Cameraman
About the Author
Tuesday, March 24, 2015
On The Other Side of the Camera...The Reporter
Hank Schoepp’s memoir "SHOOT FIRST: Code of the News Cameraman" spans 29 years (1968-1997), a significant period in television news history. While on assignment for KPIX/CBS 5 in San Francisco, he captured events through the lens of his camera which commanded regional, national and worldwide attention.
Reader Suzanne Flores asks Schoepp about his experiences working with his colleagues on the other side of the camera.
Flores: As a news cameraman, no doubt every work day experience was a different "story", but I can imagine that this dynamic would vary greatly depending on who your partnering reporter was for the assignment. Can you tell us about your working relationships between the personalities of different reporters, and remark on some of the experiences you've had while working with reporters?
Schoepp: First of all, as a cameraman shooting the news, you need to be able to "size up" or "get the feel" of who you are working with. If it's for the first time, this must happen in very short order. You don't have the luxury of a gradual process of familiarity. You are assigned to cover a story together, right now, as a team: he or she with words, you with pictures. Sometimes ego gets in the way, on either side. In which case, I would prefer not to mention the name of the reporter who, because of a demeaning attitude and verbal abuse directed toward me in front of others, I left standing at the curb when I wrapped the assignment and drove off on my way back to the station. Fortunately, this never happened more than once, and I am privileged to have only fond memories of my working relationship with countless other reporters throughout my long career.
Reader Suzanne Flores asks Schoepp about his experiences working with his colleagues on the other side of the camera.
Flores: As a news cameraman, no doubt every work day experience was a different "story", but I can imagine that this dynamic would vary greatly depending on who your partnering reporter was for the assignment. Can you tell us about your working relationships between the personalities of different reporters, and remark on some of the experiences you've had while working with reporters?
Schoepp: First of all, as a cameraman shooting the news, you need to be able to "size up" or "get the feel" of who you are working with. If it's for the first time, this must happen in very short order. You don't have the luxury of a gradual process of familiarity. You are assigned to cover a story together, right now, as a team: he or she with words, you with pictures. Sometimes ego gets in the way, on either side. In which case, I would prefer not to mention the name of the reporter who, because of a demeaning attitude and verbal abuse directed toward me in front of others, I left standing at the curb when I wrapped the assignment and drove off on my way back to the station. Fortunately, this never happened more than once, and I am privileged to have only fond memories of my working relationship with countless other reporters throughout my long career.
Flores: Tell us more about some of your fond memories. Who were some of your favorite reporters to work with, and why?
Schoepp: Twenty-nine years saw a great many reporters come and go at KPIX, and with fond memories of my working relationship with almost every one of them, it would a take another book to tell all their stories. However, there will always be someone who you remember and who stands out for a particular reason.
Mike Hegedus impressed me as one who had complete control of a feature story. Every time. He knew in advance exactly who to interview, what to say during his stand-p to the camera, and, most important, left me to my own devices, deciding and shooting whatever B-roll I felt we needed.
Pam Harper had what I used to call the "gift of approach." She had that rare combination of professional savvy and sensitivity to victims of a tragedy which, on more than one occasion, we experienced while telling a news story under difficult circumstances.
Whenever Rolando Santos spoke to my camera and microphone and the viewers at home, he would ask for my opinion afterwards, not only on its content but on his appearance while delivering the stand-up. And, from time to time, he would comment about how he felt more destined toward a career in news management rather than reporting in the field. Some years later, after holding managerial positions at various other television stations around the country, Rolando settled in Atlanta as president and head of CNN.
And some reporter/cameraman partnerships just end up as long lasting friendships. That's what happens when two great minds are required to think alike. In all modesty, coming up with original and entertaining ideas and then producing over two hundred Car 5 feature stories in a single year doesn't happen by accident. Needless to say, working alongside reporter John Lester in 1979 was one of the highlights my entire career.
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Veteran news cameraman Hank Schoepp, who worked for San Francisco’s KPIX/CBS 5 from 1968-1997. His book covers a one-of-a-kind view on some of the biggest stories of that time.
Read more about the stories captured by Schoepp and many of the high profile reporters of that time. Click here to purchase the book- $4.99 on Amazon. "SHOOT FIRST: Code of the News Cameraman"
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