Monday, October 5, 2009
Liz Chapman Comes Home
Liz Chapman has been telling great stories ever since, and I'm extremely happy to tell you that she is the newest member of our creative team at Stonefilms. In a very real sense Liz is coming home. Even during her intern days, it was obvious that Liz had an intuitive feel for research and production work. Dad was anchoring the news at KPRC and he was very supportive of this young student with so much potential. After graduation Liz worked full-time at the station as a researcher and producer before leaving in 1990 to begin working freelance.
It's been an award-winning career, with projects for M.D. Anderson Cancer Center, UT Health Science Center, KHOU-TV, and, yes, Stonefilms. She's produced everything from telethons to parades (13 years with Houston's downtown Thanksgiving Parade), rodeos to reality shows. She won an Emmy Award for a documentary on immigration. And along the way she built a reputation for class and integrity that is second to none.
I made a reference earlier to Liz coming home and it's really true. She's a part of the family and it's wonderful to see her find a place here at Stonefilms. Liz will do all the things she did during that summer in 1983: she'll research, and write, and produce, and make us laugh, and keep us sane. Liz Chapman, welcome home!
-----Ronnie
Tuesday, August 11, 2009
Programming Results
For Comcast, the show has provided results worth bragging about. "Through tips directly related to the on-demand service, we've helped capture 50 criminals" in local communities, says Matt Strauss, senior vice president of new media for Comcast, which owns Police Blotter. "It's all amazing—just from using technology that didn't exist a few years ago." Nationwide, the program is drawing about a million viewers a year, a respectable number for an on-demand program.
The Delaware State Police was one of the first law-enforcement agencies to sign on to the program, in 2007. In the beginning, authorities were a little skeptical. But "the end product exceeded my expectation," says Whitmarsh, the police spokesman. Just three months after Police Blotter premiered on the local Comcast system, his department nabbed a bank-robbery suspect who'd eluded capture for a year. "Through my direct contact with tipsters, I know Police Blotterhas been instrumental in a dozen captures," Whitmarsh says.
Inspector Crouse and her colleagues, too, have discovered the pent-up demand among fugitives for the on-demand hit. "When we've captured fugitives in the past—say, a fugitive not even on the Comcast show—they will tell us that they've seen this show," she says. "Not only is it being watched by law-abiding citizens, but bad guys are watching. That was unexpected for me: criminals watching themselves or each other on on-demand television." And they're not just watching—they're dialing in tips. "They'll turn each other in," says Crouse. Why? "I don't know what the motivation is," she says. "Maybe it's a competition issue." Delaware's Whitmarsh even cites instances of fugitives surrendering "to avoid being on local television" and causing loved ones embarrassment.
The program is just one of the varied offerings being cooked up for on-demand television. Through Pet Adoptions on Demand, in which Comcast profiles 30 "furry guest stars" each month, pet lovers are introduced to animals orphaned in local shelters. There's also Dating on Demand, which the company touts as the "first-ever TV personals." "I've come home and found my wife watching it," Comcast's Strauss says. "What I wanted to believe is there's a voyeurism component to this. I have to believe that that's part of it. This is the ultimate reality TV."
For the police, on-demand television is just the latest weapon in a media arsenal for crimefighting—from newspapers and radio to billboards and broadcast Amber Alerts in child-abduction cases. And more than others, Police Blotter produces surprising results. Once, for example, the Atlanta task force discovered a fugitive's whereabouts through a tip from an Atlanta-area corrections officer watching the show to unwind while off duty. "There was a guy already in a jail that we profiled," recalls Crouse. "The information that this guy was in custody wasn't in the database." One more case closed.
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Check out Comcast On Demand, and see how Stonefilms Producer Katharine O'Brien is providing results for her clients.
-Billy
Thursday, July 2, 2009
Texas Business Hall of Fame
As videographer Larry Clifton and grip William Payne set up our equipment, I began to look around the office that had been designated for our interview, and my nerves began to settle down. There on the walls were beautifully rendered portraits, scenes of American naval history. I was so engrossed in a particular painting that I didn't notice Perot walking in. But he noticed my interest in the paintings. With a broad smile on his face, he introduced himself, and then said, "You like that? Wonderful artist. Have lots of works around the office. Great painting there. You know that battle?" It all sounded as if a telegraph was pounding away. I managed to answer. "Yes," I said, "that's John Paul Jones on the Bonhomme Richard."
And so it was that I not only got a terrific interview with Ross Perot; I also got a personal tour of the military memorabilia that filled his enormous office building----everything from medieval armor to a walking stick that once belonged to Osama Bin Laden. It was an incredible experience. Ross Perot could not have been more generous with his time. I think he really enjoyed having someone to talk to about "all that stuff."
This story underscores why, time and again, the annual Texas Business Hall of Fame video project is one of the most fascinating, surprising, enjoyable, and fulfilling experiences for the staff of Stonefilms. We've been working with the TBHOF since the early 90s, and in that time we've written and produced profiles of an amazing array of Texas business legends: Boone Pickens, Jerry Jones, Lamar Hunt, Corby Robertson, even former President George H.W. Bush.
These video profiles are shown at the annual induction ceremonies. Each year the team at International Meeting Managers plans and stages the dinner galas, and each year they manage to top themselves. This year the TBHOF gala will be held in Houston at the Hilton Americas, on October 15. The Class of 2009 includes: James Hackett, President & CEO, Andarko Petroleum; Philip Romano, the restaurateur who created Romano's Macaroni Grill, Fuddrucker's, and a variety of other dining concepts; Martha Turner, the legendary Houston real estate executive and philanthropist; and the Susser Family of Corpus Christi, owners of over 500 gasoline and convenience stores across the Southwest.
So now it's time to gas up the Stonefilms van and drive down the road to meet some brilliant people and have some wonderful surprises.
---Ronnie
Monday, June 29, 2009
A DVD Worth Millions?
Wednesday, June 17, 2009
Father's Day
At that instant the mustard bottle, well, exploded.
My last violent effort to shake it loose had resulted in a volcano of yellow that covered my father's shirt. And as I looked at him, his face beet red, I feared another volcano to follow. What resulted was far different.
Dad looked down at his shirt, looked up at the mangled bottle in my hand, and began to roar....with laughter. The rest of us joined in, and it seemed as if that little motel room in Tahlequah, Oklahoma was shaking. The whole ridiculous thing turned out to be a perfect ending for a rough day. And it's a wonderful example of one of Dad's greatest gifts. All through his life, he had the ability to take a tense situation and turn it around with humor. There are a great many elements that make up a successful production. A sense of humor is definitely one of them.
I hope on this Father's Day that you can take stock of the gifts that your father has given you----not the golf clubs or the toolbenchs---but all those life-affirming gifts of wisdom that only your dad can come up with. Billy and I are lucky. Each day we walk into the Stonefilms office and are, in a very real sense, surrounded by the gifts Dad gave us.
Happy Father's Day!