University of Texas at Austin Department of Radio–Television–Film explained

Department of Radio–Television–Film
Established:1965
City:Austin
State:Texas
Country:United States
Chairperson:Cindy McCreery
Website:rtf.utexas.edu
Undergrad:1000+[1]
Postgrad:160
Faculty:53[2]

The Department of Radio–Television–Film at the University of Texas at Austin located in Austin, Texas, is one of the five departments comprising the Moody College of Communication. The department was founded in 1965 and has become one of the nation's premiere film schools, consistently ranking in the top 5 for graduate programs and the top 10 for undergraduate studies.[3] [4] The department has a very selective admissions policy, accepting fewer than 25% of applicants in its undergraduate program, and fewer than 15% of applicants in its graduate programs.

The film school offers an undergraduate Bachelor of Science degree in a variety of disciplines, as well as offering the nation's top MFA and Ph.D. level programs at the graduate level.

History

The pre-history of the film school dates back to 1921, when the University of Texas launched the first experimental radio broadcast in the state of Texas, offering its first degree program in broadcasting in 1939. By the 1960s, the university planned to consolidate all of its communication studies under one roof and in 1965 founded the Moody College of Communication with three departments including Journalism, Public Relations, a newly formed department of Radio–Television–Film. In 1968, the school began construction its new three building home in the northwest corner of the campus, which was completed in 1974.[1]

In 2007, the Belo Foundation announced a $15 million donation to build a new communication's facility north of the existing complex,[5] with the official groundbreaking taking place in May 2010. The Texas Student Media building has officially renamed the William Randolph Hearst Building, after a significant donation from the Hearst Corporation. The FCC licensed student television station K29HW-D received an $80,000 digital transmitter retrofit to comply with the mandated digital television transition in 2009.

Facilities

Opened in 1974, the CMB building holds most of the school's production classes, while the CMA building provides classrooms for most of the school's media studies courses shared with other communications departments. The 8 story CMB Building was formerly the headquarters of Austin City Limits with their 500-seat ACL studio, as well as Austin's PBS station KLRU.

The building features 5 professional 1200square feet sound stages with variety of Mole-Richardson lights that can be moved around and connected to the studio lighting grid, and a master light board for dimming.[6] There are also a variety of Mac editing labs with both Avid and Final Cut Pro, as well as Pro Tools and ADR Studios.

Enrolled students can check out a variety of equipment including Sony ex-1 and Panasonic HVX digital cameras, bolex and arri 16 mm cameras, production sound equipment, gaffing equipment including HMI and Mole lights, flags, C stands, generators, and dimmers. Graduate students have preferred access to all equipment in addition to exclusive access to Arri Alexa and 35 millimeter Arri film cameras.[7]

Curriculum

Undergraduate

The department offers a single degree to undergraduates: the four-year, full-time Bachelor of Science. Generally, the first two years are spent fulfilling the university core requirements while completing the necessary lower-division courses starting with RTF 305, a class introducing the fundamentals of Media Studies, followed by RTF 317, a narrative strategies class focusing on structure in film and television, and RTF 318, formerly known as Film 1, the first film production class consisting of three projects: a still photo project, a still photo project with audio, and a final short film project.

Once the three classes initial have been taken along with at least two additional lower division courses, commonly film history class, and a film course with a cultural diversity component, students progress into upper division studies where they can specialize in a variety of tracks. The department offers robust media studies curriculums[8] as well as a variety of film production tracks.[9]

Graduate

The department's scholarly and teaching interests focus on the cultural, social, economic, political and discursive settings in which communication systems, industries, texts and audiences exist and operate. We examine national and international media institutions, the role, development and impact of communication and information technologies, the production of media content, and the nature and form of media representations. We investigate how various audiences receive, interact with, interpret and produce media texts and have a special focus on studies of culture and the international dimensions of communication processes. The department's faculty addresses these issues from a variety of theoretical and methodological approaches associated with the humanities and social sciences.

The department's Master of Fine Arts programs are designed to help students become filmmakers and writers capable of producing provocative and entertaining work. The programs concentrate on storytelling for film, video, and time-based media. The MFA in production emphasizes directing while grounding students in skills across production craft disciplines.

The RTF Department currently has 28 faculty members who provide an environment in which graduate students receive optimal opportunity for study, research, teaching and the production of creative work. Production area faculty are all active, working filmmakers with experience spanning genres.

Alumni

Alumni of the Radio–Television–Film program include David Blue Garcia, Bryan Bertino, Mark Duplass, Jay Duplass, Glen Powell, Robert Rodriguez, Tobe Hooper, Michael Zinberg, Matthew McConaughey, Thomas Schlamme, Lev L. Spiro, Daniel Pearl, Bruce Hendricks, Rob Walker, Beau Thorne, Maggie Carey, Patrick Sean Smith, Heather Courtney, Peggy Chiao, Todd Berger, Noel Wells, Geoff Marslett, the creators of Hemlock Grove, Andrew Dismukes, Matt Hullum and many members of Rooster Teeth Productions.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: About . Department of Radio–Television–Film . June 15, 2015 .
  2. Web site: Faculty . Department of Radio-Television-Film . June 30, 2024.
  3. Web site: Radio–Television–Film Fact Sheet . PDF . Moody College of Communication . June 16, 2015 . https://web.archive.org/web/20150924045407/http://moody.utexas.edu/sites/communication.utexas.edu/files/about/fact-sheet-radio-television-film.pdf . 2015-09-24 . dead.
  4. Book: Kelly , Karin . Film School Confidential: The Insider's Guide To Film Schools . Penguin . 2007 . B00256Z2AU.
  5. Web site: The Belo Foundation, Philanthropists Commit $15 Million to The University of Texas at Austin College of Communication . The University of Texas at Austin . June 16, 2015 .
  6. Web site: CMB 4.118 – Studio 4C . Moody College of Communication . June 16, 2015 .
  7. Web site: The Cage: Student Production Resource Center . The Cage . June 16, 2015 .
  8. Web site: Guide to Upper-Division Media Studies Pathways . PDF . Department of Radio–Television–Film Department . June 30, 2024 .
  9. Web site: Guide to Upper Division Production Course Work . PDF . Department of Radio–Television–Film Department . June 30, 2024 .