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ANyone work in TV?

8 replies

forsale · 17/08/2007 08:48

My friends dd is going into her last year at University studying media. She is after a presenting job ultimately but would like to get some experience. Can anyone advise how best to get into this area or share experience? Many thanks

OP posts:
SueW · 17/08/2007 09:39

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This has been withdrawn by MNHQ at OP's request.

Thunderpants · 17/08/2007 22:24

I worked in tv for 15 years, and in my expereince, the best thing you can do is to be really, really keen and be willing to work at a rubbish job for rubbish money. Many of the people I know have worked their way up from being runners. suggest that she contacts the head of news or programmes, enclosing a cv and being very keen and interested. maybe ask if she can come and have a look around the studio/newsroom etc. even if they say no, her keenness will come across. we once advertised at the local uni for someone on media course to work a 5 - 9 am shift. and guess what? we only had one reply . he got the job and went on to work in local radio, then presented his own show, then moved into national. I don't know how the bbc works, as i worked for itv. which is your local station (on the slight offchance that i may have a contact there...)

forsale · 18/08/2007 00:07

thanks for your replies ladies.

our local station is Central but she is at uni in Chester.

OP posts:
Thunderpants · 18/08/2007 14:03

sorry, don't know anyone well enough there to ask. good luck though.

vonsudenfed · 18/08/2007 14:27

Weeeellll, I've worked as a producer for a while (currently at home on maternity leave) and what I would say is that it is very, very hard to get in at the moment - even experienced people are finding it difficult to get jobs right now. But someone has to, so if she perseveres, I'm sure she will get something.

Sooo, my top tips would be:

  • get as much work experience as she can - really she should have been doing this already in her summer holidays.

  • most reputable companies have work experience opportunities- but they will usually only let you do a couple of weeks. But it is by far the best way to start. And even now, it's a good way of making contacts while she gets going.

  • Entry level jobs are very thin on the ground. Some of the big companies (RDF, Endemol) do have structured runners jobs where you do get a bit of training, but they are very, very oversubscribed.

  • Consider taking a job initially as a runner in a post-production (editing) house, as there are more of them (they all employ loads of runners) and it is experience. You will also get to hear when production companies are crewing up.

Take a look at www.productionbase.com for jobs (she would have to join on their student rate). But also have a look at the 'working in tv' group on facebook (and others) - I have seen small scale runners jobs posted on there recently.

That's just for general tv stuff. Getting to be a presenter is unbelievably hard, and she would have to be very good indeed. She needs to put together a showreel of stuff and just volunteer for anything to get experience that she can show to people.

But beware of working in production offices and waiting to be discovered as a presenter - it does happen to a very, very few people, but mostly those kind of runners/secretaries just piss everyone off by not working very hard.

She's more likely to get a presenting job from on-screen journalism, i.e. doing local news etc - that's where a lot of people start. But a media degree isn't the best way of doing that, unless she already has lots of work experience, she'd need to think about a post-graduate tv journalism diploma or something.

By far the best way of becoming a presenter, is to be an expert on something, esp something unusual like girls reporting on formula one racing.

And by far the best thing to do is not to come to London. While there are fewer opportunities in the regional centres (Glasgow, Birmingham, Manchester, Bristol, Cardiff etc) there are also far fewer people chasing them, and far fewer people with experience. You're more likely to get work experience, and if you do get a job, way more likely to get trained and to get more opportunities.

really hope this helps - do get her to ask any specific questions if she wants

forsale · 18/08/2007 18:02

thats very helpful thanks

OP posts:
SueW · 18/08/2007 19:03

This reply has been withdrawn

This has been withdrawn by MNHQ at OP's request.

vonsudenfed · 19/08/2007 11:36

It's also good for discovering what you really want to do. A couple of bouts of work experience in museums taught me that as a shouty, energetic person, they might not be the right place for me...

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