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NEWS BLOG by Tony Flanders
SkyWeek TV
For the past three months, my biggest job at Sky & Telescope has been writing the scripts for our SkyWeek television program. It's been the most fun I've had since the late lamented Night Sky magazine ceased publication.
I've always loved writing for a general audience that knows little or nothing about astronomy, and you can't get a lot more general than the audience reached by television. And as with the Constellation Close-up department that I wrote for Night Sky, it gives me infinite opportunities to explore all the areas of human endeavor that astronomy touches on -- which is to say almost everything. Science, history, archaeology, folklore, art . . . you name it.
This is also the most challenging job I've done for S&T. It's tough to wrap your mind around an entirely new medium; I would never have been able to do it without the advice and assistance of the brilliant people at Powderhouse Productions.
Above all, I owe a huge debt of gratitude to the amazing multitalented Shweta Krishnan — scientist, writer, artist, and videographer. Shweta used to be an intern at Sky & Telescope, and now works for Powderhouse. She's the one who conceptualizes what the whole thing will look like, finds illustrations and animations to match the text, and creates them when none is available. And she's the one who criticizes my scripts, decides when they're unillustratable, incomprehensible, or simply boring and tells me — in no uncertain terms — how to fix them.
SkyWeek currently airs in the cracks between programs on a few public television stations; we expect to expand our audience dramatically in the next few months. It's also available on our website at skyweek.com, and on YouTube.
I'm curious what people think about it. In some ways it seems like a piece of fluff — but I hope that it's a fun and occasionally enlightening piece of fluff.
Hevelius Firmamentum
Shweta Krishnan
S&T: Dennis diCicco
Above all, I owe a huge debt of gratitude to the amazing multitalented Shweta Krishnan — scientist, writer, artist, and videographer. Shweta used to be an intern at Sky & Telescope, and now works for Powderhouse. She's the one who conceptualizes what the whole thing will look like, finds illustrations and animations to match the text, and creates them when none is available. And she's the one who criticizes my scripts, decides when they're unillustratable, incomprehensible, or simply boring and tells me — in no uncertain terms — how to fix them.
SkyWeek currently airs in the cracks between programs on a few public television stations; we expect to expand our audience dramatically in the next few months. It's also available on our website at skyweek.com, and on YouTube.
I'm curious what people think about it. In some ways it seems like a piece of fluff — but I hope that it's a fun and occasionally enlightening piece of fluff.
Posted by Tony Flanders, February 1, 2012
The following comments do not necessarily reflect the opinions of Sky Publishing.
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all comments (2 total)
Sky Week, Jan 30th-Feb. 5th
Posted by Colin Anderson
February 2, 2012 At 12:18 AM PST
Tony,
I've beena keen amateur astronomer for a long time but I have to say the clear graphics and description of the movement of the night sky are just what the beginner needs. For some time my otherwise keenly intelligent spouse has struggled with the concept of how the stars, the moon, planets and asteroids move across the sky in relation to each other. This was something of an Aha! moment for her. Keep up the good work.
Skyweek
Posted by bob cavanaugh
February 3, 2012 At 12:11 PM PST
Tony, great graphics and nice explanation as to what and HOW we see things in the night sky. Keep up the the great work and look forward to more of your stories each week!
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comments (2)