About The Video Journalism Workshop

The tools for instant, global, visual communication now fit in your backpack: a video camera, laptop, editing software and Internet connection. The era of the backpack video journalist is here. It is revolutionizing the worldwide exchange of information and ideas — and changing the way we live.

Emmy award winning backpack video journalist Bill Gentile — a pioneer in his field with over 30 years of experience – teaches people to produce powerful TV and web productions. Information is power, and we aim to help you harness that power to document and to change the world.

In a four-day intensive workshop you learn the full range of skills required for effective visual storytelling—from idea development and pitching to shooting, producing, scriptwriting, narrating and editing the final product. You also learn to market your work, using the latest and most effective social media tools. So join the revolution. REGISTER today for the next Video Journalism Workshop With Bill Gentile.

You will learn how to:

  • Articulate story ideas.
  • Capture powerful images and clean sound.
  • Recognize and cultivate dramatic story arcs.
  • Conduct compelling, in-depth interviews.
  • Write powerful treatments and scripts.
  • Narrate stories.
  • Edit for maximum impact.

What are the Video Journalism Workshops?

The Video Journalism Workshops With Bill Gentile are intensive, four-day immersions in the craft of “backpack journalism” defined as character-driven television/web productions with hand-held digital cameras by a single practitioner. The workshops cover the gamut of this storytelling craft from the genesis and shaping of story ideas, to shooting powerful images that drive the story, to the capture and use of sound, to script writing, narration, and editing with Macintosh computers and Final Cut Pro. These workshops are appropriate for beginners with some experience as well as existing practitioners who desire to sharpen their skills or acquire new ones. We welcome photojournalists, print and video journalists, aspiring documentarians, filmmakers and independent storytellers.

 

Bill Gentile (center front with hands on knees)
with students and assistants at the
December 2009 Video Journalism Workshop.

 

Who should attend?

The Video Journalism Workshops With Bill Gentile are for beginners with some experience as well as more seasoned practitioners who want to sharpen their skills and acquire new ones. We welcome photojournalists making the transition to film and video. Print journalists seeking to expand their skills will find the workshops particularly useful. Broadcast journalists accustomed to the technology and techniques preceding today’s hand-held digital cameras will find that the newer equipment delivers a more immediate, intimate version of visual communication than their predecessors. Video journalists, documentarians, filmmakers and independent storytellers who want to expand their skill set and learn from one of the pioneers in the field also will benefit from the Workshops. You must be at least 18 years old to attend.

What will I learn?

 

Day 1:

  • Introductions and objectives.
  • Clips to Sequence to Scene to Story – the final objective.
  • Basic elements of a new language: XCU to XWA.
  • The Six-Shot System: Demonstration.
  • Composition: The deliberate arrangement of elements in your images.
  • The Rule of Thirds and Multiple Planes.
  • Gentile’s Shooting Rules.
  • Introduction to Final Cut Pro and how it relates to the new language.
  • Characters and The Sequence. Casting a wide net.
  • Proposals, Titles and The Controlling Idea.
  • View “Echoes of War” and two models of “character-driven” documentaries.

 

Day 2:

  • Present Title and Controlling Idea.
  • Opening scene. Closing scene.
  • Production Schedule.
  • Dramatic Arc.
  • View “Voice of Hope” as example of multiple dramatic arcs.
  • “Participatory Observation:” Engage your subjects.
  • Formal and Informal interviews.
  • Gentile’s Interview Rules.
  • More Final Cut Pro.
  • Logs, Scripts and Treatments.
  • Sound: The Heartbeat of Documentary.

 

Day 3:

  • More Titles and Controlling Ideas.
  • View “Nurses Needed” and discuss characters that embody editorial points.
  • Editing and “the creative treatment of reality.”
  • View “Underground Yoga” and “Knife and Gun Club” as editing models.
  • Aesthetics vs. mechanics.
  • The script: Writing to pictures.
  • Narration, the third dimension of “three-dimensional chess.”

 

Day 4:

  • View “Afghanistan: The Forgotten War,” as model for narration and storytelling.
  • Your conversation with the audience.
  • More editing with Final Cut Pro.
  • View final products.
  • Upload your work to the Internet.

 

You will learn how to use the power of visual information. You will learn to use hand-held digital cameras to document and to change the world you live in. You will learn a new language and you will learn to participate in the international dialogue that is visual communication. You will learn how to make powerful television and web productions, to tailor your work for greatest impact, to package your presentation and to mold your message for major broadcasters and Internet outlets. You will learn about gaining access to the editors and producers of television and Internet venues and how to compete with some of the best video documentary makers, journalists and storytellers in the field. And you will learn how to post your work on the Internet.

View student work and what workshop participants have to say
about their experience.

The primary teacher and the driving force behind the workshops is Bill Gentile, an independent filmmaker teaching at American University in Washington, DC. He is a pioneer in the craft of video journalism and character-driven documentary, and is one of the first to use the hand-held digital cameras that have revolutionized visual communication for television and the Web. He worked for Video News International (VNI), precursor of The New York Times Television Company, and has completed assignments for The Learning Channel, the Discovery Channel, National Geographic Television, ABC’s Nightline With Ted Koppel, NOW With Bill Moyers, NOW on PBS, Court TV and Lion TV. He shared the Robert F. Kennedy Award for Human Rights Reporting, Honorable Mention, for a story on rape during the 1994 Rwanda Genocide. He shared two National Emmy Awards and was nominated for two others.

Gentile in Afghanistan.
See his bio, examples of his work (filmphoto) and his blog.

 

Also teaching at the workshop will be assistants whom Gentile has chosen for their level of professional achievement, technical proficiency and capacity to teach.

Where are the workshops held?

Because Bill Gentile resides in Washington, DC, the Video Journalism Workshops generally have been held in the Washington, DC, but others are currently being scheduled for other cities in the United States and in Latin America.

What should participants bring?

Participants are required to bring their own digital camera, laptop computer with Final Cut Pro, external hard drive and tape. We strongly suggest mini-DV cameras with manual capability to allow practitioners to control aperture, shutter speed and focus.

How much does it cost?

The four-day workshop, which runs from about 9 am to 9 pm each day, costs $1,595.00 per participant.

Does the fee include room, board or travel?

The fee does not include room, board or travel. Although workshop organizers will attempt to negotiate with local providers for reduced, group costs, all expenses incurred are responsibility of the participant.

How do I enroll in the workshop?

Fill out our online registration form and pay using the gateway. You may also send check or money order to Bill Gentile:

Bill Gentile Productions
3243 Quesada St. NW
Washington, DC 20015

You can also pay with credit card.

Applications are accepted on a first-come, first-serve basis. Space is limited so don’t wait to apply.

Can I get a refund if I have a sudden change of plans?

You get a 100 percent refund if you notify us 14 days or more prior to the beginning of the course.
You get 50 percent refund if you notify us between seven and 13 days prior to the beginning of the course.
You get 0 percent refund if you advise us fewer than six days prior to the beginning of the course.

Customer Service:

Bill Gentile
3243 Quesada St. NW
Washington, DC 20015
202-492-6405

Shipping Policy:

Because the product provided is a service, “delivery” will be determined by the dates of the workshop.

 

Next Video Journalism Workshop: December 8 - 11, 2016, Washington, DC
Seats are limited. Learn More and Register to reserve your spot!

202-492-6405 | billgentile@billgentile.com