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Best Jobs 2008 Adventure Filmmaker The ultimate dream job Welcome to the salad days of adventure TV. Series depicting real people taking serious risks have left the developmental sidelines to become top cable-programming goals. "Networks get that there's a huge audience for these shows," says John Smithson, chief creative director of London-based adventure-film company Darlow Smithson Productions. The Discovery Channel has cashed in with a range of winners, from Man vs. Wild to Deadliest Catch, which follows crab fishermen working the Bering Sea. But others—like the History Channel, which premieres its chronicle of the rugged citizens of the North Country, Tougher in Alaska, in May—are catching up, which means more jobs to come in high-adrenaline entertainment. So what does it take to make a truly hazardous hit? To find out, JOE SPRING joined a 25-member field crew from Original Productions in Dutch Harbor, Alaska, while they filmed Deadliest Catch's fourth season (premiering April 15). Here's the lowdown on six key positions. Creator/Executive Producer Thom Beers, 52 Senior Producer Ethan Prochnik, 44 Supervising Producer Lisa Tanzer, 43 Director of Photography Doug Stanley, 45 Cameraman/Producer Eric Lange, 38 Gyroscopic Camera Operator Dave Arnold, 36 How to Break In Turns out those years of dedication to climbing or kayaking or skiing are actually good for your résumé ("Told you, Dad!"). Making adventure TV requires physical work, and production companies value athletic prowess. Of course, they care even more about your technical skills and creative talents. Here's where to start. 1. Get basic training. Some insiders point to quality film programs, like those at USC or NYU. Others say to shmooze your way into a low-level position and learn on the job. 2. Make a short film to market yourself. After college, cameraman/producer Don Bland created a music video. "I showed it to an editor at Warren Miller and he gave me a job." 3. Take any on-set job. Thom Beers started as a production assistant for commercials when he was 30, and the oldest guy in the room. Series producer Matt Renner's first gig was as a sound tech on a porn shoot ("I didn't know it was going to be porn until I was in the middle of it.") 4. Target production companies that specialize in adventure. Some of the best: Original Productions (origprod.com), Darlow Smithson Productions (darlowsmithson.com), Serac Adventure Films (Boulder; seracfilms.com), and Moore Huntley Productions (Boston; moorehuntley.com). 5. Once you're in, keep pushing. "If you work your ass off and are willing to do anything," says Deadliest Catch co-executive producer Jeff Conroy, "this is actually a really easy business." |
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