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Broadcasters Add More Tools to Cover Hurricane Sandy
11/19/2012
NEW YORK—Backpack mounted cellular live shot systems have
become one of the workhorses of television news, with the buildout
of 4G smartphone data service in major population centers
allowing journalists to go live without the bulk, set-up time, need
for line-of-sight and other limitations of microwave and satellite
gear. Bonded cellular backpacks gang multiple cellular data connections
into a bandwidth path sufficient to carry high-quality
television video back to the news studio.
Hurricane Sandy proved to be a major test of the bonded cellular
technology, and according to a group of electronic journalists
covering the storm, the gear got a more than passing grade.
“I would say it worked like I expected it to, like it should, and I
was very happy about that,” said CNN New
York bureau chief Darius Walker. “What really
helped with the backpacks is redundancy,
to have the cards of different mobile
carriers… ‘varietal redundancy’ is what I
call it, a good variety of possible signals…
power may be down for this company, a
tower may be up for another company, so
that helped out a lot.”
WHAT DIFFERENCE A DECADE
MAKES
He noted that CNN deployed more than
just the bonded cellular systems in its Sandy
coverage. “It was interesting in this situation
where we used almost all of the tools available.
You name it: we were streaming material,
we were FTP-ing material, we would
bring it up on satellite, backpacks, flyaways,
microwave; we used it all. It was tough, but
[this panoply of technology] made it more
possible than it would have if this had happened
10 years ago.”
Each live shot technology had its plusses
and minuses, according to Walker. “We
had some microwave issues because of the
wind blowing down some microwave towers
here in the city,” he said. The dishes for
both satellite trucks and fly-away satellite
transmission gear had to be protected from
wind gusts during the height of the storm.
And then “are we in position to see a certain
satellite because generally, in a city, certain
buildings will block it. That’s why you
have all these different types of technology,
so that if one doesn’t work the other does,
when one comes up the other might go
down.”
The storm was particularly felt on exposed
Rhode Island, home of WPRI-TV, the
Providence CBS affiliate owned by LIN Media.
“Our TVU backpacks worked amazingly
well,” said station director of engineering
Bill Hague. “I was surprised. We had one
backpack down in Pettaquamscutt on the
southern tip of Rhode Island. We only had
3G connection, but it definitely worked
well and we had no issues there. They were
able to feed tape and do liveshots without
any issues.
 |
| WPRI photojournalist Johnny Villella prepares his TVUPack for deployment. |
“I had anticipated having problems with
them, and I told the news director we’d do
our best and see what happens,” he added.
“But amazingly I had 31 [successful] backpack
shots.”
He said WPRI also used its terrestrial microwave
equipment, with a pair of trucks
that were HD capable and two more handling
SD 16:9 images. “Microwave shots
came from all different parts of the state,
including from downtown Narragansett,
which took the brunt of the storm,” he said.
“We had to play the wind game with the
microwave mast: put the mast up, bring it
down. You had to do that all through the
storm until… we’d go up, do a live hit or a
tape feed, and get the mast back down. We
tried to park in locations where we were
shielded from the wind, on the lee side of
the buildings… there were two locations
where we could get away with only putting
the mast half way up.”
SANDY’S IMPACT
Joe Truncale, vice president of operations
and engineering at NY1 has been with
the Time Warner Cable network for about
20 years. “Obviously, after 9/11, this is #2,”
he said, referring to Sandy’s impact on local
news.
“We had a combination of uplink trucks,
satellite/microwave vehicles, plus Dejero
[bonded cellular systems]. We had trucks
at set locations, in the Rockaways, Staten
Island, and then we’ve got the Dejeros that
are traveling around, covering press conferences.
We had one in a guy’s house in the
Rockaways, tracking the storm from the beginning…
we’ve had a lot of success with
our coverage from the field.”
Of the cellular units, he said: “There were
obviously times and locations where it
didn’t work well… but under the circumstances
we’ve enhanced our coverage using
these devices. And it certainly resonates
with the viewers, we’ve got tons of viewer
mail that’s really supportive of what our
coverage is, what we’re trying to provide
here, the service for the communities.”
Rain-fade is often a negative factor for
satellite uplink operations during storms,
but Truncale said they lucked out. “It wasn’t
the torrential rain, it was a misty rain,” he
said. “It wasn’t inches of rain, that’s what
was so weird about the storm. It was a big
surge, and a lot of wind, high winds. With
our microwave gear, when the high winds
hit certain areas, obviously the masts came
down.”
EXPERIENCE PAYS OFF
While hurricane coverage might be a
once-in-a-career occurrence for ENG crews
and reporters in New York, New Jersey and
surrounding states, Dave Sirak, news operations
manager at WFTV, the Cox-owned ABC
affiliate in Orlando, Fla., calls his home state
a “kind of a hurricane test area.” His two-man
crew boarded a plane for New York with a
cellular backpack in their checked luggage,
and rented a car on arrival. That car’s electrical
system was key to WFTV’s live shot operation
during and after the storm.
“The three things we had to keep alive
were: the LiveU needed to be
charged, the laptop needed to
be running, and then we needed
to keep our iPhones alive
for IFB. The cellphone coverage
held up throughout the entire
storm,” he said, noting that the
cell service only began diminishing
the day after the storm’s
landfall.
Sirak listed three necessities
for storm coverage: “gasoline,
bandwidth and food, probably
in that order. Without gas, everything
stops. But if you’ve
got gas, bandwidth and food, you
can survive a long duration event
like a hurricane.”
With fuel very much on CNN’s mind—
especially after Hurricane Katrina—the cable
network maintains a fuel truck at its Atlanta
headquarters. “At the first sign of how
big this storm was going to be, we asked it
to come up so our vehicles could get fuel,”
said CNN’s Walker. Though the truck carries
both diesel and unleaded gas, its capacity is
still finite. “We sort of rationed our own gas,”
to keep all their vehicles operating.
A small caveat regarding the bonded cellular
technology’s effectiveness during the
storm: WFTV’s Sirak has a theory about why
cellphone airwaves were so available for
Sandy’s backpack live shot operation. “New
Yorkers are very cellphone-dependent, but
they had no way to charge their phones
once the power went out. So we were basically
provided with the entire cellphone
band network, all to ourselves. We probably
had some of the best connections we’ve
ever had during landfall, which really surprised
me.”
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