Showing posts with label byu. Show all posts
Showing posts with label byu. Show all posts

07 August 2007

BYU Weekly

This week is the return of new episodes of BYU Weekly. This program features BYU students reporting on all aspects of BYU, including academically, culturally, athletically, etc. Some past reports have been about the invention of Fizzy Yogurt, a student trying to become a pop-star in China, and the Women's Conference service projects.
Tune in this week to see a report on BYU's Center for Service and Learning, an interview about BYU's upcoming Education Week, and a story on Brock Trejo, captain of the BYU Men's Soccer team. Hosting this week's show is Kim Christensen. Reporting this week are Janell Robinson, Kaitland Ely, Janifer Hemingway, and Jarom Jordan.
For times when you can see it, click here. To see archived episodes, click here.
Of course, BYU Weekly welcomes comments and story ideas.

31 July 2007

BYU Devotional

Tuesday's Devotional held at the Joseph Smith Building on campus was televised on BYU-TV. The presenter was Merrill Christensen, professor of Nutritional Science. He used a line from Jeffrey R. Holland's April 2007 General Conference as the basis of his talk, "Our culture's obsession with comparing [and] competing."
He quoted two of President Hinckley's talks, saying, "The world into which you will move will be terribly competitive. You are moving into the most competitive age the world has ever know."
Brother Christensen pointed out that we aren't to seek out the praise of man, but in order to be successful, we need to impress people. "If you don't impress the coach, you don't make the team. If you don't impress an employer, you don't get the job."
He asked Elder Russell M. Nelson about this, to which he got the response, "If you are well prepared in everything you do in school and professionally, and do the highest quality of work of which you are capable, your work will speak for itself and the right people will be impressed."
If you missed this BYU Devotional address, or simply wish to watch again, click on the picture below.



Here's a note about my conversation with Brother Christensen before the Devotional.
He worried about taking too much time, as he was told to keep it to 25 minutes. He then said that being a nutritional scientist, he knew the one ingredient needed for talks: shortening.



30 July 2007

Clive Barnes, who is the chief Dance, Drama and Opera critic for the New York Post once said, "Television is the first truly democratic culture - the first culture available to everybody and entirely governed by what the people want. The most terrifying thing is what people do want."

I think, however, that while most popular programming seems to be controlled by ratings, the "truly democratic culture," there are plenty of programs and stations that are immune to such measures. BYU-TV is one such station. BYU Broadcasting, as stated in its own mission statement, endeavors to "enrich the lives of audiences through the creation and delivery of religious, educational, cultural, news, and sports programs that reflect Brigham Young University's unique standards of excellence;" hardly programming that could withstand any democratic process. While engaging a large audience is important to BYU Broadcasting, it isn't necessarily what drives its content.

One more thought:
BYU has long believed that "The world is our campus." Quoting again from BYU Broadcasting's mission statement, "[BYU Broadcasting] is uniquely qualified to expand the influence of Brigham Young University beyond its campus." Hmmm...

26 July 2007

BYU-TV on BYU.TV

So, a friend tells you about this great show that was on last night. Too bad you didn't Tivo it, right? Well, unprecedented by any other broadcasting entity, BYU-TV not only streams it's channel for free, but it records everything over the last two weeks, Tivo style. That's right. By watching BYU-TV online, you can go back in time up to two weeks, and watch anything that has aired.
Missed that classic sports Friday night, the one where Ty Detmer tears apart the vaulted Miami Hurricane defense? No problem. Log in and watch.
Missed that great devotional address that Bonny Parkin gave. No problem. Log in and watch it, pause it, rewind it, re-watch it.
The first time you log into byu.tv, you'll be prompted to install the Move Networks software, which is nothing more than a small plug-in for your browser, and you'll be ready to watch. Give it a second to download the schedule from the last two weeks, and then pick your program.
Click here to get started.
This will be important, as in future posts, I'll link to interesting shows that are airing. And remember, it's not byu.tv.com. It's just byu.tv