Studio L308 works single and multi-camera, in the field and in the edit, no gallery needed. Pick a stage, then a role, to see exactly what that person does and says at that point of the production.
Pick a stage and a role
Single-camera and multi-camera, field and edit. No gallery required.
Every role matters at every stage. Choose a stage above (plan, set up, shoot, edit) and a role to see what that person is doing and saying.
These are the same role names used on the HNC A and HNC B team pages. Camera Assistant works the floor alongside the camera operators, taking shot notes and directing where the cameras shoot next.
Nobody is locked into one job. Across the year you rotate through different roles on different productions, so you find what you are good at and build a broad, honest picture of how a production really comes together.
Direct one show, run camera on the next, cut the one after. You leave knowing where you fit, not guessing.
Once you have done sound or floor managing yourself, you work better with the person doing it next time.
Every role you take is a credit on a finished production you can point to, with your name on it.
Each role teaches a different part of making television and online content. Here is the headline for the main ones.
How to shape a vision, lead a team, make decisions under pressure, and protect the story from the first shot to the final cut.
How to plan, schedule and organise a production so it actually gets made: budgets, call sheets, contacts and keeping everyone on track.
How to frame, focus, expose and move the camera, hold continuity across takes, and feed the editor clean, usable footage.
How to capture clean audio and shape a look, the two things that most separate a student film from a professional one.
How to run a set: keep it safe and calm, cue the talent, count people in, and keep the whole shoot to schedule.
How to assemble a story in post, add graphics and titles, and do the research and prep that makes the content accurate and sharp.
Whatever roles you take, the studio builds the skills employers and universities actually look for.
Briefing, pitching, giving and taking direction, and working with contributors.
Working to a brief and a deadline, scheduling, and keeping records as you go.
Pulling together under pressure, covering each other, and sharing the win.
Adapting when a location, a take or the weather does not go to plan.
Grab the planning tools and templates in the Student Area.
Go to the Student Area