Teleprompter: Difference between revisions
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{{Short description|Display device that provides a speaker with electronic visual text of a speech or script}} |
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{{Redirect|Telescript|the programming language|General Magic}} |
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{{for|the racehorse|Teleprompter (horse)}} |
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[[Image:Teleprompter schematic.svg|thumb|360px|'''Schematic representation:'''<table style="background:transparent"><tr><td>(1) Video camera</td><td>(2) Shroud</td></tr><tr><td>(3) Video monitor</td><td>(4) Two-way mirror</td></tr><tr><td>(5) Image from subject </td><td>(6) Image from video monitor</td></tr></table>]] |
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{{redirect|TelePrompTer|the media company|TelePrompTer Corporation}} |
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[[Image:Teleprompter in use.jpg|thumb|right|290px|Teleprompter in use]] |
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[[File:Teleprompter schematic.svg|thumb|300px|Schematic representation: (1) Video camera; (2) Shroud; (3) Video monitor; (4) Clear glass or beam splitter; (5) Image from subject; (6) Image from video monitor]] |
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{{Refimprove|date=March 2009}} |
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A '''teleprompter''' |
A '''teleprompter''', also known as an '''autocue''', is a display device that prompts the person speaking with an electronic visual text of a speech or script. |
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Using a teleprompter is similar to using [[cue cards]]. The screen is in front of, and usually below, the [[Camera lens|lens]] of a [[professional video camera]], and the words on the screen are reflected to the eyes of the [[television presenter|presenter]] using a sheet of clear glass or other [[beam splitter]], so that they are read by looking directly at the lens position, but are not imaged by the lens. Light from the performer passes through the front side of the glass into the lens, while a shroud surrounding the lens and the back side of the glass prevents unwanted light from entering the lens. Optically this works in a very similar way to the [[Pepper's ghost]] illusion from classic theatre: an image viewable from one angle but not another. |
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(Note that this is only true in principle — when the space between the lens and the mirror is covered in a shroud, an ordinary glass pane will work as a two-way mirror). |
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Because the speaker can look straight at the lens while reading the script, the teleprompter creates the illusion that the speaker has memorized the speech or is speaking spontaneously, looking directly into the camera lens. Notes or cue cards, on the other hand, require the presenter to look at them instead of at the lens, which can cause the speaker to appear distracted, depending on the degree of deflection from the natural [[line of sight]] to the camera lens, and how long the speaker needs to glance away to glean the next speaking point; speakers who can internalize a full sentence or paragraph in a single short glance timed to natural breaks in the spoken cadence will create only a small or negligible impression of distraction. |
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The technology has continued to develop, including the following iterations: |
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* first mechanical paper roll teleprompters — used by television presenters and speakers at U.S. political conventions in 1952<ref name=Smithsonian>{{cite web|url=https://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/a-brief-history-of-the-teleprompter-88039053/|title=A Brief History of the Teleprompter (click on fourth photo image box for description and clearer view)|author=Stromberg, Joseph|date=22 October 2012|access-date=3 June 2018}}</ref> |
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* dual glass teleprompters — used by TV presenters and for U.S. conventions in 1964<ref name=Getty>{{cite web|url=https://www.gettyimages.co.uk/album/kiss-and-teleprompter-a-look-back-at--ZSKiLqlWBUaxLQhi1gvBTg#attorney-general-robert-kennedy-smiling-but-with-tears-in-his-eyes-picture-id515489640|title=Kiss and Teleprompter|work=Getty Images|access-date=3 June 2018}}</ref> |
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* computer-based rolls of 1982 and the four-prompter system for U.S. conventions — added a large off-stage confidence monitor and inset lectern monitor in 1996<ref name="DFP">{{cite web|date=January 6, 2022|title=The Benefits of Using a Teleprompter on your Laptop|url=https://www.vtpapps.com/post/using-a-teleprompter-on-your-laptop|access-date=January 6, 2022|work=VTP Apps}}</ref> |
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* replacement of glass teleprompters at U.K. political conferences by several large off-stage confidence monitors in 2006.<ref name=Guardian>{{cite web|url=https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2008/sep/18/liberaldemocrats.libdemconference|title=Bog standard search for Elysium|work=[[The Guardian]]|author=Hoggart, Simon|date=18 September 2008|access-date=3 June 2018}}</ref> |
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{{Sic|TeleP|rompTer|hide=y}} in the US and [[Autocue]] in [[Commonwealth of Nations|Commonwealth]] and some European countries were originally trade names but have become [[genericized trademark]]s used for any such display device.[[File:Cámaras Sony 1 (cropped).JPG|thumb|[[Professional video camera|TV camera]] with lens and a teleprompter on a [[Camera pedestal|pedestal]]|251x251px]] |
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==History== |
==History== |
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{{Globalize||USA|date=September 2023}} |
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The first "teleprompters" were simply mechanical devices located near the camera. The script was printed on a paper scroll, which was advanced as the performer read. |
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[[File:LBJ Civil Rights Act crowd.jpg|right|thumb|U.S. President [[Lyndon B. Johnson]] uses a teleprompter while announcing the [[Civil Rights Act of 1964]].]] |
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The [[TelePrompTer Corporation]] was founded in the 1950s by [[Fred Barton, Jr.]], [[Hubert Schlafly]] and [[Irving Berlin Kahn]]. Barton was an [[actor]] who suggested the concept of the teleprompter as a means of assisting television performers who had to memorize large amounts of material in a short time.<ref>{{Cite book |
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| publisher = The Difference |
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| isbn = 0-9767761-0-3 |
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| last = Brown |
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| first = Laurie |
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| title = The Teleprompter Manual |
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| date = 2005-12-28 |
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}}</ref> |
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Schlafly built the first teleprompter in 1950. It was simply a mechanical device, operated by a hidden technician, located near the camera.<ref>Engineers' Device Eased Speechmakers' Minds, ''Wall Street Journal'', April 26, 2011, p. A6</ref> The script, in inch-high letters, was printed by a special electric typewriter on a paper scroll, which was advanced as the performer read, and the machines rented for the then-considerable sum of $30 per hour.<ref>"TV's Cost-Cutting Gadgets," Sponsor, 22 September 1952, 36. [http://americanradiohistory.com/Archive-Sponsor-Magazine/1952/Sponsor-1952-09-2.pdf Green Bay-de Pere Telephone Directory {{!}} Even Our Phone Number Tells Our Story... ADAMS 1 → TV gadgets that save money for sponsors]</ref> |
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The teleprompter was used for the first time on December 4, 1950, in filming the CBS soap ''The First Hundred Years''.<ref>Stromberg, Joseph, A Brief History of the Teleprompter, ''Smithsonian Magazine'', 22 October 2012</ref> It was used by [[Lucille Ball]] and [[Desi Arnaz]] in 1953<ref name="Oppenheimer"/> to read commercials on-camera. [[Jess Oppenheimer]], who created ''[[I Love Lucy]]'' and served for its first five years as its producer and head writer, developed the first "in-the-lens" prompter<ref name="Oppenheimer">Laughs, [https://books.google.com/books?id=7fW-rGDmGxIC&pg=PA204 Luck...and Lucy: How I Came to Create the Most Popular Sitcom of All Time, by Jess Oppenheimer with Gregg Oppenheimer], pp. 204–205.</ref> and was awarded U.S. patents<ref>{{cite patent|country=US|number=2883902|pubdate=1959-04-28|title=Prompting apparatus|inventor1-last=Oppenheimer|inventor1-first=Jess}}</ref><ref>{{cite patent|country=US|number=2926559|pubdate=1960(1951 TV series)]]-03-01|title=Prompting apparatus for cameras|assign1=Jayo Corp.|inventor1-last=Oppenheimer|inventor1-first=Jess}}</ref> for its creation. His system uses a mirror to reflect a script onto a piece of glass placed in front of the camera lens, thus allowing the reader to look directly into the camera. |
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The TelePrompTer company was founded in the 1950s by [[Fred Barton, Jr.]], [[Hubert Schlafly|Hubert J. (Hub) Schlafly]], and [[Irving Berlin Kahn]]. Barton was an [[actor]] who suggested the [[concept]] of the teleprompter as a means of assisting [[television]] performers who had to memorize large amounts of material in a short time. |
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The producers of ''[[Dragnet (1951 TV series)|Dragnet]]'' estimated the use of teleprompters cut the show's production time by as much as 50%<ref name="New Business Tool 1954 pp. 122-113">New Business Tool: the TelePromTer,” ''Business Screen Magazine'', V. 145. No. 1, (February 1954), pp. 122–113</ref> [[Arthur Godfrey]], [[Raymond Massey]], [[Sir Cedric Hardwicke]], and [[Helen Hayes]] were early users of the technology.<ref name="New Business Tool 1954 pp. 122-113"/> |
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The first [[personal computer]]–based Teleprompter, Compu=Prompt,<!-- sic, with equals sign --> appeared in 1982. It was invented and marketed by Courtney M. Goodin and Laurence B. Abrams in [[Hollywood, Los Angeles, California|Hollywood, California]]. The custom software and specially-redesigned camera hardware ran on the [[Atari 8-bit family|Atari 800 Personal Computer]]. Their company later became ProPrompt, Inc., which is still providing teleprompting services over 25 years later. Other paper-based Teleprompting companies — Q-TV and Telescript — followed suit and developed their own software several years later, when computers with enough graphics power to provide the smooth scrolling text became available. |
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The technology soon became a staple of [[television news]] and is the primary system used by newscasters today. |
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[[Jess Oppenheimer]], producer of ''[[I Love Lucy]],'' claims credit for the original concept of the teleprompter and was awarded the U.S. patent for its creation.<ref>{{cite patent|US|2883902}}, see also {{cite patent|US|2926559}}.</ref> Originally used so that [[Lucille Ball]] could read commercials on-camera, it soon became a staple for [[television news]]. |
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In 1952 former President [[Herbert Hoover]] used a Schlafly-designed speech teleprompter<ref>{{Cite web |last=Help Center |first=TeleprompterPAD |title=What is a Presidential Teleprompter? |url=https://help.teleprompterpad.com/hc/en-gb/articles/9837075415453-What-is-a-presidential-teleprompter}}</ref> to address the [[1952 Republican National Convention]] in [[Chicago, Illinois|Chicago]]. U.S. Governor [[Paul A. Dever]] spoke at the [[1952 Democratic National Convention]], also held in Chicago, using a mechanical-roll teleprompter on a long pole held by a TV technician in the convention audience, while the 1952 Republican National Convention used a smaller teleprompter placed in front of the speaker's rostrum.<ref name="Smithsonian"/> Mechanical prompters were still being used as late as 1992.{{citation needed|date=January 2020}} |
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As late as 1992, ''[[The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson]]'' was still using an early mechanical teleprompter. |
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In the early years of teleprompter use by politicians, some saw the device as cheating.<ref>George E. Condon, Radio and Television Editor, On The Air, ''Cleveland Plain Dealer'', May 13, 1955, p. 14</ref> in 1955, [[Richard L. Neuberger]], a Democratic Senator from Oregon, proposed legislation that if a politician used a teleprompter the use of the device had to be noted in the speech.<ref>Political Burlesque Blamed on TV Dubbing, ''Cleveland Plain Dealer'', August 20, 1955, P. 19</ref> |
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In the late 1990s and early 2000s, Autoscript (a UK- and US-based company) pioneered use of [[Thin film transistor liquid crystal display|TFT-LCD]] monitors, rather than the traditional [[Cathode ray tube|CRT]]s. This enabled significantly less weight on the camera and improved portability. They also introduced high-brightness monitors, enabling prompters to be used in direct sunlight. A further breakthrough in 2005 introduced Voice Activated Prompting. Along with their partner, Sysmedia, Autoscript developed a prompter that required no peripheral to control the scroll of the prompter. The voice-activated prompter simply scrolled at the speed of the presenter's speech. |
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[[File:1960s Cinecraft - Ohio Story film crew on sound stage.jpg|thumb|[[Cinécraft Productions]] used teleprompters extensively in their filmed made for television programs. Image courtesy of Hagley Museum and Library]] |
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The new technology saw quick adoption in the [[sponsored film]] industry where cutting production costs made the difference between a film that made money and one that lost money. [[Cinécraft Productions]] was the first to advertise the availability of three-camera synchronized filming with a teleprompter when in 1954 they began to advertise their use of the new technology in ''Business Screen'', a magazine dedicated to the sponsored film industry.<ref>Cinecraft Productions, Fourth Production Review, Business Screen Magazine, v. 15, no. 1 February 1954, p. 96 https://digital.hagley.org/businessscreen?page=4</ref> Cinécraft used the technique to film the 1953–1960 weekly television series ''The Ohio Story''.<ref>Hagley Library has digitized a number of the ''Ohio Story'' TV episodes and posted them on their research website. https://digital.hagley.org/2019227</ref> Cinécraft also used the technique for executive ''desk talks'' in the 1950s and 1960s.<ref>See, for example, the Republic Steel Corporation “Building Economic Understanding series https://digital.hagley.org/islandora/search/%22Building%20economic%20understanding%22?type=edismax&cp=islandora%3A2623872</ref> |
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Although renowned for his oratory, President Barack Obama was widely ridiculed in early 2009 for his reliance on a teleprompter and his gaffe-prone performances when parted from his 'prompter. One satire took the form of a blog "written" by Obama's presidential teleprompter.<ref>{{cite http://baracksteleprompter.blogspot.com}}.</ref> |
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On January 4, 1954,<ref>"Ike Uses Pair of Teleprompters". ''Cleveland Plain Dealer'', January 6, 1954, p. 13.</ref> [[Dwight Eisenhower]] was the first President to use a teleprompter for a State of the Union address.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.smithsonianmag.com/history-archaeology/A-Brief-History-of-the-Teleprompter-175411341.html |title=A Brief History of the Teleprompter |access-date=2013-07-22 |archive-date=2013-12-28 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131228194615/http://www.smithsonianmag.com/history-archaeology/A-Brief-History-of-the-Teleprompter-175411341.html |url-status=dead }}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal|last1=Alexander|first1=Neta|last2=Keren|first2=Tali|date=September 27, 2021|title=Paper, glass, algorithm: teleprompters and the invisibility of screens|url=http://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/14704129211026358|journal=Journal of Visual Culture|language=en|volume=20|issue=2|pages=395–417|doi=10.1177/14704129211026358|s2cid=238220479|issn=1470-4129|url-access=subscription}}</ref> |
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The first [[personal computer]]-based teleprompter, CompuPrompt, appeared in 1982. It was invented and marketed by Courtney M. Goodin and Laurence B. Abrams in Los Angeles, California. The custom software and specially-redesigned camera hardware ran on the [[Atari 8-bit computers|Atari 800]] computer, which featured smooth hardware-assisted scrolling. Their company later became ProPrompt, Inc., still in business {{As of|2021|lc=y}}. Paper-based teleprompting companies Electronic Script Prompting, QTV, and Telescript followed suit and developed their own software several years later when computers powerful enough to scroll text smoothly became available. In January 2010 Compu=Prompt received a Technology and Engineering Emmy Award for "Pioneering Development in Electronic Prompting".<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.emmyonline.tv/mediacenter/tech_2k9_winners.html|title=The Emmy Awards - NATIONAL TELEVISION ACADEMY ANNOUNCES 59th ANNUAL WINNERS OF TECHNOLOGY & ENGINEERING EMMY® AWARDS|date=January 7, 2012|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120107211123/http://www.emmyonline.tv/mediacenter/tech_2k9_winners.html |archive-date=2012-01-07 }}</ref> |
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==Etymology== |
==Etymology== |
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[[File:teleprompter.jpg|thumb|A teleprompter displaying text]]{{Unreferenced section|date=June 2017}} |
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The word '''TelePrompTer''', with [[CamelCase|internal capitalization]], originated as a [[trade name]] used by the TelePrompTer Company, who first developed the electronic device in the 1950s. |
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The word |
The word "TelePrompTer", with [[CamelCase|internal capitalization]], originated as a [[trade name]] used by the [[TelePrompTer Corporation]], which first developed the device in the 1950s. The word "teleprompter", with no capitalization, has become a [[genericized trademark]], because it is used to refer to similar systems manufactured by many different companies. Some other common terms for this type of device are: |
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* [[Autocue]], the trademark of Autocue Group Ltd, most commonly used in [[Commonwealth of Nations|Commonwealth]] countries |
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* electronic speech notes |
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* Autoscript is used to brand the devices in the United States |
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* cueing device |
* cueing device |
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* electronic speech notes |
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* idiot board (slang) |
* idiot board (slang) |
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* prompter |
* prompter |
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* [[autocue]] (in certain [[Commonwealth of Nations|Commonwealth]] countries) |
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==Modern design== |
==Modern design== |
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===Television=== |
===Television=== |
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[[ |
[[File:Teleprompter 3716.JPG|thumb|Studio camera with Autoscript teleprompter]] |
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Modern teleprompters for |
Modern teleprompters for news programs consist of a [[personal computer]], connected to [[video monitor]]s on each [[professional video camera]]. In certain systems, the PC connects to a separate display device to offer greater flexibility in setup, distances, and cabling. The monitors are often black-and-white and have the scanning reversed to compensate for the reflection of the [[mirror]]. A peripheral device attached has a knob that can be turned to speed up, slow down, or even reverse the scrolling of the text. The text is usually displayed in white letters on a black background for the best readability, while cues are in inverse video ([[light-on-dark color scheme|black on white]]). Difficult words (mainly international names) are spelled out [[phonetic]]ally,<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.reuters.com/|title=Reuters | Breaking International News & Views|website=Reuters}}</ref> as are other particulars like "Nine-eleven" (to specify that the event [[September 11 attacks|9/11]] should not be pronounced "[[9-1-1|nine-one-one]]", for example). |
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With the development of inexpensive teleprompter [[software application]]s as well as free Web-based teleprompter applets, many different disciplines are now using teleprompters to help them deliver sermons, deliver speeches, and create quality audio recordings. Unlike their more advanced counterparts, these entry-level products work on desktop computers, laptop computers, and even tablet computers to enable the speaker to control the rate and flow of their speech. They are also used by many different organizations and schools to deliver prewritten information by relative novices. They are usually called "personal teleprompters". |
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===Speeches=== |
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[[Image:SOU2007.jpg|thumb|left|250px|U.S. President [[George W. Bush]] during the 2007 [[State of the Union]]. Note the tinted transparent conference teleprompters on either side of his lectern.]] |
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Teleprompters are often used for [[public speaking|speech]]es as well. In this application, they are called Conference Teleprompter Systems. In this case, the reflector is usually a piece of glass with a special partially reflective coating. It is mostly [[Transparency (optics)|transparent]] so as to not block the view of the speaker by the [[audience]] or cameras. Usually, two of these are set up, one on either side of the [[lectern]] (if there is one), so that the speaker can look around at the audience and always be able to see one. Except for these [[aesthetic]] changes, they work in the same way as they do for television. |
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===Presidential (or glass) teleprompters=== |
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With the development of small, cheap teleprompter software applications, many different disciplines are now using simple desktop applications to help them deliver sermons, deliver speeches, and create quality audios. Unlike their big brothers, these small applications work on a desktop or laptop computer, enabling the speaker to control the rate and flow of his speech. They are also used by many different organizations and schools to deliver prewritten information by relative novices. They are usually called "personal teleprompters." |
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{{multiple image |
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| direction = vertical |
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| width = 230 |
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| footer = |
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| image1 = President Ronald Reagan saluting the crowd at the Republican National Convention.jpg |
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| alt1 = A man, wearing a suit, saluting while standing between two transparent, glass teleprompters. |
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| caption1 = President [[Ronald Reagan]] between two reflective teleprompters in the [[Caesars Superdome|Louisiana Superdome]] during the [[1988 Republican National Convention]]. |
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| image2 = President of the United States Barack Obama Democratic National Convention 2012 (50100004413).jpg |
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| alt2 = A man, wearing a suite, standing behind two transparent, glass teleprompters. |
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| caption2 = President [[Barack Obama]] in 2012, behind two teleprompters, whose monitors are embedded in the floor of the stage. Teleprompters were an issue in the [[2012 United States presidential election]] as Republicans criticized Obama for using teleprompters.<ref>{{cite news |last1=Rucker |first1=Philip |title=Republicans mock Obama’s teleprompter use |url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/republicans-mock-obamas-teleprompter-use/2011/10/18/gIQA6hEivL_story.html |access-date=September 1, 2024 |work=The Washington Post |date=October 19, 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111019174855/https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/republicans-mock-obamas-teleprompter-use/2011/10/18/gIQA6hEivL_story.html |archive-date=October 19, 2011}}</ref> |
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}} |
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Glass teleprompters were first used at the [[1956 Democratic National Convention]]. The inventor of the teleprompter, Hubert Schlafly, explained that he wanted to create a less obtrusive teleprompting system than the ones used at the time. He said, "We developed a 'one-way mirror' device we called the ''Speech View'' system... The prompter, hidden in the base, reflected the text on the glass to the speaker while the audience looked through the glass without being aware of the text. Two such prompters, one on the right and one on the left of the speaker allowed him to switch from one to the other and appear to address the entire audience".<ref name="TTM">Laurie Brown, ''The Teleprompter Manual'' (Pleasant Ridge, Michigan: The Difference Press, 2006), pp. 5–6. {{ISBN|0-9767761-0-3}}.</ref> |
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===Concerts=== |
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Teleprompters are sometimes used in [[concert]]s, to assist performers who have trouble remembering the words to songs. The teleprompter may be of the kind used in speeches, or it may be only a monitor that is set into the stage floor. |
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Schlafly's company then created a speaker's lectern that included two synchronized glass teleprompters and a range of technological innovations including air conditioning and an adjustable-height speaker's platform. The success of the system led the company to develop a new model for use on TV cameras, with the glass placed directly in front of the lens. The camera "looked through the glass; the performer looked directly at the TV audience and was able to read the text word for word. This device now has worldwide use".<ref name="TTM"/> |
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===Interrotron=== |
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Documentary filmmaker [[Errol Morris]] uses a teleprompter-like setup in conducting interviews which he refers to as the "Interrotron." The prompter equipment is set up on the camera (often a film camera); however, instead of displaying a written script, it is used to display the image coming from a video camera trained on Morris who is seated nearby. In this way, the interview subject can be looking directly into the lens of the camera to see Morris' face while speaking, instead of off in some other direction. The camera focused on Morris can also be set up with a prompter displaying the subject (using the "video assist" output if a film camera is used on the subject). In this way, the two people can carry out a virtual face-to-face conversation for the interview. |
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Typically, a screen on either side of the speaker shows mirrored text from upward-facing floor monitors at the base of a stand supporting a [[one-way mirror]] at the top, angled down towards the screen. The speaker sees the text on the screen reflected in the mirror, while the audience sees what looks like a sheet of tinted glass on each side of the speaker. |
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Schlafly's glass teleprompters were also used for the [[1956 Republican National Convention]], and at both parties' conventions from then on. In 1964, glass teleprompters were used by [[Robert F. Kennedy]], at the time the [[United States Attorney General|Attorney General]], who served in both the [[Presidency of John F. Kennedy|Kennedy]] and early [[Presidency of Lyndon B. Johnson|Johnson]] Administrations (1961–1964), to deliver his convention speech.<ref name="Getty"/> |
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===Confidence monitors=== |
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In 1996, for the first time, speakers at the [[1996 Democratic National Convention|Democratic National Convention]], held at the [[United Center]] in [[Chicago]], Illinois, used a four-teleprompter system: as can be seen at another convention in image (A), the first three prompters are placed to the left, right and in front of the speaker, the latter embedded within the speaker's lectern, enabling the speaker to look down at the lectern without losing their place in the text of the speech; while in image (B), the fourth prompter is a large confidence monitor located immediately below the lenses of the TV broadcast cameras, at a distance of several meters/yards from the speaker. |
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This modification to the traditional two-teleprompter set-up continues to be in use at both the [[Democratic Party (United States)|Democratic]] and [[Republican Party (United States)|Republican]] parties' national conventions: the two glass teleprompters on either side of the speaker's lectern create the illusion that the speaker is looking directly at the audience in the hall, the monitor embedded in the lectern, together with the fourth, much larger teleprompter screen, known as a "confidence monitor", placed immediately below the broadcast TV cameras which are located some distance away from the convention stage on a specially-constructed broadcasting gantry. This placement of the center prompter creates the illusion that the speaker is periodically looking straight into the camera lens and thereby appears to directly address the TV audience watching the televised Convention coverage.<ref name=DFP/> |
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In 2006, speakers at the [[Liberal Democrat Conference]], held at the [[Brighton Centre]] in [[Brighton]], UK also used a three-screen system (but this time consisting entirely of large off-stage confidence monitors mounted on poles — which are often described outside North America, together with glass teleprompters, as "[[autocue]]s"), where the skill required for those using it, according to the [[Liberal Democrats (UK)|Liberal Democrats]]' former leader, [[Menzies Campbell]] (2006—2008), is to move their gaze seamlessly from one screen to the other: left, center (near the broadcast TV cameras), right and then back again.<ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=W38dAwAAQBAJ&q=%22menzies+campbell+my+autobiography%22+autocues&pg=PT248|title=Menzies Campbell: My Autobiography|author=Campbell, Menzies|work=Hachette Books, London|date=2014|publisher=Hodder & Stoughton |isbn=9781444796643|access-date=27 May 2018}}</ref> |
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As well as helping the speaker to appear to sometimes directly address the TV audience during his or her speech, this system allows the speaker – in another case cited, the party's then-new leader, [[Nick Clegg]] (2008–2015) – to abandon the podium lectern and roam the stage, speaking with apparent spontaneity but in fact constantly assisted by three large autocue screens placed throughout the conference hall.<ref name="Guardian"/> Ironically, this use of the system was adopted by Clegg to counter the oratorical success of another party leader, [[David Cameron]] (later to become British Prime Minister), who bestrode stages while speaking seemingly off-the-cuff, having memorized key parts of his speech.<ref name="Atkinson">{{cite web|url=http://maxatkinson.blogspot.co.uk/2009/09/cleggs-conference-speech-definitely-ok.html|title=Clegg's conference speech: 'definitely OK, absolutely fine, without any doubt not bad'|author=Atkinson, Max|date=24 September 2009|access-date=27 May 2018}}</ref> |
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This use of multiple off-stage confidence monitors also dispenses with the need for glass teleprompters to be present on the conference stage, thereby reducing "stage clutter", and removing the inevitable restrictions on the speaker's movement and field of vision imposed by on-stage glass prompters. The disadvantage of such a system is that the provision of "giant teleprompters" becomes essential to maintaining the illusion of speaking with apparent spontaneity.<ref name="Atkinson"/> |
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<gallery class="center" widths="290" heights="190"> |
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File:2012 DNC day 2 (7958010012).jpg|(A) The first three teleprompters: A monitor screen partly embedded in the lectern's desktop displays the scrolling text of the speech in synchrony with two screens embedded in the podium floor. They are on either side of the speaker, reflected by the angled glass teleprompters above them. Click this image and the ones below to see the four-teleprompter system more clearly. |
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File:2012 DNC day 3 Brian Schweitzer (7959825568).jpg|(B) The fourth teleprompter: A large confidence monitor displays the scrolling text of the speech immediately below the lenses of the broadcast TV cameras, several meters/feet away from the speaker. |
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File:Barack Obama Denver Speech 2008.jpg|(C) The above-described four-teleprompter set-up in use at the [[2008 Democratic National Convention]] in [[Denver]], [[Colorado]], USA (the large confidence monitor under the TV cameras is near the bottom far right of this frame). |
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</gallery> |
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== Gallery == |
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Various types of modern teleprompters<gallery widths="240" heights="180"> |
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File:TV-Kamera beim ZDF 20200229 04.jpg|TV camera at [[ZDF]] in the ''nano'' studio. |
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File:ORF-Salzburg 1150.JPG|[[ORF (broadcaster)|ORF]] broadcasting studio of ''Salzburg today (Bundesland heute)'' |
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File:Teleprompter at Latvian Television.jpeg|Two teleprompters at [[Latvijas Televīzija|Latvian Television]] |
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File:Plenary (01113273) (9775474662).jpg|Teleprompter glass on left and right from speaker's point of view |
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File:20 May 2019 - Teleprompter at Centre Stage prior to the opening night of Collision 2019 at Enercare Center in Toronto, Canada.jpg|Three teleprompters near a stage |
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File:Bob Costas of NBC Sports reads from the teleprompter at 2008 Beijing Olympics.jpg|Teleprompter used during [[NBC Sports]] coverage of [[2008 Summer Olympics|2008 Olympics]] |
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File:Teleprompter in use.jpg|Teleprompter in use |
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</gallery> |
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==See also== |
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* [[Cue card]] |
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* [[Interrotron]], a similar device displaying a live image of an interviewer or interviewee instead of text, allowing both to look straight at the camera<ref>{{cite web |last1=Nobile, Jr |first1=Phil |title=The Interrotron: How Errol Morris Changed The Way Documentaries Watch Us |url=https://birthmoviesdeath.com/2017/07/07/the-interrotron-how-errol-morris-changed-the-way-documentaries-watch-us |website=Birth.Movies.Death. |language=en |date=7 July 2017}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |last1=Pavlus |first1=John |title=Errol Morris's Secret Weapon for Unsettling Interviews: The Interrotron |url=https://www.fastcompany.com/1663105/errol-morriss-secret-weapon-for-unsettling-interviews-the-interrotron |website=Fast Company |date=30 September 2016}}</ref> |
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==Notes== |
==Notes== |
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{{reflist}} |
{{reflist|colwidth=30em}} |
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==External links== |
==External links== |
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{{Commons category|Teleprompters}} |
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*[http://www.proprompt.com/html/abt.html History of Compu=Prompt First Computerized Prompter] |
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* [https://digital.hagley.org/film_2019227_fc387_07 1966 Cinécraft production film demonstrating the use of multi-cameras with teleprompters. Source: Hagley Library digital archive] |
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*[http://www.directprompt.com/free.html Teleprompter Demonstration] |
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* [https://www.hagley.org/librarynews/innovation-cinecraft-multi-camera-production-television Kevin Martin, Innovation At Cinécraft: Multi-Camera Production For Television. ''Hagley Collection Research and News''] |
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*[http://www.jumbobright.com Large Prompter Displays] |
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* [https://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/a-brief-history-of-the-teleprompter-88039053/ Joseph Stromberg, A Brief History of the Teleprompter. ''Smithsonian Magazine'', October 22, 2012] |
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*[http://www.eteleprompt.com Freeware Teleprompter Software] |
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[[Category:Audiovisual introductions in 1950]] |
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[[Category:American inventions]] |
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[[Category:Television technology]] |
[[Category:Television technology]] |
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[[Category: |
[[Category:Television terminology]] |
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[[Category:TelePrompTer Corporation]] |
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[[ar:شاشة القراءة]] |
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[[ca:Teleprompter]] |
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[[de:Prompter]] |
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[[es:Teleprompter]] |
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[[fr:Prompteur]] |
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[[he:טלפרומפטר]] |
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[[nl:Autocue]] |
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[[ja:プロンプター (電気機器)]] |
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Latest revision as of 23:34, 4 January 2025
A teleprompter, also known as an autocue, is a display device that prompts the person speaking with an electronic visual text of a speech or script.
Using a teleprompter is similar to using cue cards. The screen is in front of, and usually below, the lens of a professional video camera, and the words on the screen are reflected to the eyes of the presenter using a sheet of clear glass or other beam splitter, so that they are read by looking directly at the lens position, but are not imaged by the lens. Light from the performer passes through the front side of the glass into the lens, while a shroud surrounding the lens and the back side of the glass prevents unwanted light from entering the lens. Optically this works in a very similar way to the Pepper's ghost illusion from classic theatre: an image viewable from one angle but not another.
Because the speaker can look straight at the lens while reading the script, the teleprompter creates the illusion that the speaker has memorized the speech or is speaking spontaneously, looking directly into the camera lens. Notes or cue cards, on the other hand, require the presenter to look at them instead of at the lens, which can cause the speaker to appear distracted, depending on the degree of deflection from the natural line of sight to the camera lens, and how long the speaker needs to glance away to glean the next speaking point; speakers who can internalize a full sentence or paragraph in a single short glance timed to natural breaks in the spoken cadence will create only a small or negligible impression of distraction.
The technology has continued to develop, including the following iterations:
- first mechanical paper roll teleprompters — used by television presenters and speakers at U.S. political conventions in 1952[1]
- dual glass teleprompters — used by TV presenters and for U.S. conventions in 1964[2]
- computer-based rolls of 1982 and the four-prompter system for U.S. conventions — added a large off-stage confidence monitor and inset lectern monitor in 1996[3]
- replacement of glass teleprompters at U.K. political conferences by several large off-stage confidence monitors in 2006.[4]
TelePrompTer in the US and Autocue in Commonwealth and some European countries were originally trade names but have become genericized trademarks used for any such display device.
History
[edit]The examples and perspective in this deal primarily with the United States and do not represent a worldwide view of the subject. (September 2023) |
The TelePrompTer Corporation was founded in the 1950s by Fred Barton, Jr., Hubert Schlafly and Irving Berlin Kahn. Barton was an actor who suggested the concept of the teleprompter as a means of assisting television performers who had to memorize large amounts of material in a short time.[5] Schlafly built the first teleprompter in 1950. It was simply a mechanical device, operated by a hidden technician, located near the camera.[6] The script, in inch-high letters, was printed by a special electric typewriter on a paper scroll, which was advanced as the performer read, and the machines rented for the then-considerable sum of $30 per hour.[7]
The teleprompter was used for the first time on December 4, 1950, in filming the CBS soap The First Hundred Years.[8] It was used by Lucille Ball and Desi Arnaz in 1953[9] to read commercials on-camera. Jess Oppenheimer, who created I Love Lucy and served for its first five years as its producer and head writer, developed the first "in-the-lens" prompter[9] and was awarded U.S. patents[10][11] for its creation. His system uses a mirror to reflect a script onto a piece of glass placed in front of the camera lens, thus allowing the reader to look directly into the camera.
The producers of Dragnet estimated the use of teleprompters cut the show's production time by as much as 50%[12] Arthur Godfrey, Raymond Massey, Sir Cedric Hardwicke, and Helen Hayes were early users of the technology.[12]
The technology soon became a staple of television news and is the primary system used by newscasters today.
In 1952 former President Herbert Hoover used a Schlafly-designed speech teleprompter[13] to address the 1952 Republican National Convention in Chicago. U.S. Governor Paul A. Dever spoke at the 1952 Democratic National Convention, also held in Chicago, using a mechanical-roll teleprompter on a long pole held by a TV technician in the convention audience, while the 1952 Republican National Convention used a smaller teleprompter placed in front of the speaker's rostrum.[1] Mechanical prompters were still being used as late as 1992.[citation needed]
In the early years of teleprompter use by politicians, some saw the device as cheating.[14] in 1955, Richard L. Neuberger, a Democratic Senator from Oregon, proposed legislation that if a politician used a teleprompter the use of the device had to be noted in the speech.[15]
The new technology saw quick adoption in the sponsored film industry where cutting production costs made the difference between a film that made money and one that lost money. Cinécraft Productions was the first to advertise the availability of three-camera synchronized filming with a teleprompter when in 1954 they began to advertise their use of the new technology in Business Screen, a magazine dedicated to the sponsored film industry.[16] Cinécraft used the technique to film the 1953–1960 weekly television series The Ohio Story.[17] Cinécraft also used the technique for executive desk talks in the 1950s and 1960s.[18]
On January 4, 1954,[19] Dwight Eisenhower was the first President to use a teleprompter for a State of the Union address.[20][21]
The first personal computer-based teleprompter, CompuPrompt, appeared in 1982. It was invented and marketed by Courtney M. Goodin and Laurence B. Abrams in Los Angeles, California. The custom software and specially-redesigned camera hardware ran on the Atari 800 computer, which featured smooth hardware-assisted scrolling. Their company later became ProPrompt, Inc., still in business as of 2021[update]. Paper-based teleprompting companies Electronic Script Prompting, QTV, and Telescript followed suit and developed their own software several years later when computers powerful enough to scroll text smoothly became available. In January 2010 Compu=Prompt received a Technology and Engineering Emmy Award for "Pioneering Development in Electronic Prompting".[22]
Etymology
[edit]The word "TelePrompTer", with internal capitalization, originated as a trade name used by the TelePrompTer Corporation, which first developed the device in the 1950s. The word "teleprompter", with no capitalization, has become a genericized trademark, because it is used to refer to similar systems manufactured by many different companies. Some other common terms for this type of device are:
- Autocue, the trademark of Autocue Group Ltd, most commonly used in Commonwealth countries
- Autoscript is used to brand the devices in the United States
- cueing device
- electronic speech notes
- idiot board (slang)
- prompter
Modern design
[edit]Television
[edit]Modern teleprompters for news programs consist of a personal computer, connected to video monitors on each professional video camera. In certain systems, the PC connects to a separate display device to offer greater flexibility in setup, distances, and cabling. The monitors are often black-and-white and have the scanning reversed to compensate for the reflection of the mirror. A peripheral device attached has a knob that can be turned to speed up, slow down, or even reverse the scrolling of the text. The text is usually displayed in white letters on a black background for the best readability, while cues are in inverse video (black on white). Difficult words (mainly international names) are spelled out phonetically,[23] as are other particulars like "Nine-eleven" (to specify that the event 9/11 should not be pronounced "nine-one-one", for example).
With the development of inexpensive teleprompter software applications as well as free Web-based teleprompter applets, many different disciplines are now using teleprompters to help them deliver sermons, deliver speeches, and create quality audio recordings. Unlike their more advanced counterparts, these entry-level products work on desktop computers, laptop computers, and even tablet computers to enable the speaker to control the rate and flow of their speech. They are also used by many different organizations and schools to deliver prewritten information by relative novices. They are usually called "personal teleprompters".
Presidential (or glass) teleprompters
[edit]Glass teleprompters were first used at the 1956 Democratic National Convention. The inventor of the teleprompter, Hubert Schlafly, explained that he wanted to create a less obtrusive teleprompting system than the ones used at the time. He said, "We developed a 'one-way mirror' device we called the Speech View system... The prompter, hidden in the base, reflected the text on the glass to the speaker while the audience looked through the glass without being aware of the text. Two such prompters, one on the right and one on the left of the speaker allowed him to switch from one to the other and appear to address the entire audience".[25]
Schlafly's company then created a speaker's lectern that included two synchronized glass teleprompters and a range of technological innovations including air conditioning and an adjustable-height speaker's platform. The success of the system led the company to develop a new model for use on TV cameras, with the glass placed directly in front of the lens. The camera "looked through the glass; the performer looked directly at the TV audience and was able to read the text word for word. This device now has worldwide use".[25]
Typically, a screen on either side of the speaker shows mirrored text from upward-facing floor monitors at the base of a stand supporting a one-way mirror at the top, angled down towards the screen. The speaker sees the text on the screen reflected in the mirror, while the audience sees what looks like a sheet of tinted glass on each side of the speaker.
Schlafly's glass teleprompters were also used for the 1956 Republican National Convention, and at both parties' conventions from then on. In 1964, glass teleprompters were used by Robert F. Kennedy, at the time the Attorney General, who served in both the Kennedy and early Johnson Administrations (1961–1964), to deliver his convention speech.[2]
Confidence monitors
[edit]In 1996, for the first time, speakers at the Democratic National Convention, held at the United Center in Chicago, Illinois, used a four-teleprompter system: as can be seen at another convention in image (A), the first three prompters are placed to the left, right and in front of the speaker, the latter embedded within the speaker's lectern, enabling the speaker to look down at the lectern without losing their place in the text of the speech; while in image (B), the fourth prompter is a large confidence monitor located immediately below the lenses of the TV broadcast cameras, at a distance of several meters/yards from the speaker.
This modification to the traditional two-teleprompter set-up continues to be in use at both the Democratic and Republican parties' national conventions: the two glass teleprompters on either side of the speaker's lectern create the illusion that the speaker is looking directly at the audience in the hall, the monitor embedded in the lectern, together with the fourth, much larger teleprompter screen, known as a "confidence monitor", placed immediately below the broadcast TV cameras which are located some distance away from the convention stage on a specially-constructed broadcasting gantry. This placement of the center prompter creates the illusion that the speaker is periodically looking straight into the camera lens and thereby appears to directly address the TV audience watching the televised Convention coverage.[3]
In 2006, speakers at the Liberal Democrat Conference, held at the Brighton Centre in Brighton, UK also used a three-screen system (but this time consisting entirely of large off-stage confidence monitors mounted on poles — which are often described outside North America, together with glass teleprompters, as "autocues"), where the skill required for those using it, according to the Liberal Democrats' former leader, Menzies Campbell (2006—2008), is to move their gaze seamlessly from one screen to the other: left, center (near the broadcast TV cameras), right and then back again.[26]
As well as helping the speaker to appear to sometimes directly address the TV audience during his or her speech, this system allows the speaker – in another case cited, the party's then-new leader, Nick Clegg (2008–2015) – to abandon the podium lectern and roam the stage, speaking with apparent spontaneity but in fact constantly assisted by three large autocue screens placed throughout the conference hall.[4] Ironically, this use of the system was adopted by Clegg to counter the oratorical success of another party leader, David Cameron (later to become British Prime Minister), who bestrode stages while speaking seemingly off-the-cuff, having memorized key parts of his speech.[27]
This use of multiple off-stage confidence monitors also dispenses with the need for glass teleprompters to be present on the conference stage, thereby reducing "stage clutter", and removing the inevitable restrictions on the speaker's movement and field of vision imposed by on-stage glass prompters. The disadvantage of such a system is that the provision of "giant teleprompters" becomes essential to maintaining the illusion of speaking with apparent spontaneity.[27]
-
(A) The first three teleprompters: A monitor screen partly embedded in the lectern's desktop displays the scrolling text of the speech in synchrony with two screens embedded in the podium floor. They are on either side of the speaker, reflected by the angled glass teleprompters above them. Click this image and the ones below to see the four-teleprompter system more clearly.
-
(B) The fourth teleprompter: A large confidence monitor displays the scrolling text of the speech immediately below the lenses of the broadcast TV cameras, several meters/feet away from the speaker.
-
(C) The above-described four-teleprompter set-up in use at the 2008 Democratic National Convention in Denver, Colorado, USA (the large confidence monitor under the TV cameras is near the bottom far right of this frame).
Gallery
[edit]Various types of modern teleprompters
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TV camera at ZDF in the nano studio.
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ORF broadcasting studio of Salzburg today (Bundesland heute)
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Two teleprompters at Latvian Television
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Teleprompter glass on left and right from speaker's point of view
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Three teleprompters near a stage
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Teleprompter used during NBC Sports coverage of 2008 Olympics
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Teleprompter in use
See also
[edit]- Cue card
- Interrotron, a similar device displaying a live image of an interviewer or interviewee instead of text, allowing both to look straight at the camera[28][29]
Notes
[edit]- ^ a b Stromberg, Joseph (22 October 2012). "A Brief History of the Teleprompter (click on fourth photo image box for description and clearer view)". Retrieved 3 June 2018.
- ^ a b "Kiss and Teleprompter". Getty Images. Retrieved 3 June 2018.
- ^ a b "The Benefits of Using a Teleprompter on your Laptop". VTP Apps. January 6, 2022. Retrieved January 6, 2022.
- ^ a b Hoggart, Simon (18 September 2008). "Bog standard search for Elysium". The Guardian. Retrieved 3 June 2018.
- ^ Brown, Laurie (2005-12-28). The Teleprompter Manual. The Difference. ISBN 0-9767761-0-3.
- ^ Engineers' Device Eased Speechmakers' Minds, Wall Street Journal, April 26, 2011, p. A6
- ^ "TV's Cost-Cutting Gadgets," Sponsor, 22 September 1952, 36. Green Bay-de Pere Telephone Directory | Even Our Phone Number Tells Our Story... ADAMS 1 → TV gadgets that save money for sponsors
- ^ Stromberg, Joseph, A Brief History of the Teleprompter, Smithsonian Magazine, 22 October 2012
- ^ a b Laughs, Luck...and Lucy: How I Came to Create the Most Popular Sitcom of All Time, by Jess Oppenheimer with Gregg Oppenheimer, pp. 204–205.
- ^ US 2883902, Oppenheimer, Jess, "Prompting apparatus", published 1959-04-28
- ^ US 2926559, Oppenheimer, Jess, "Prompting apparatus for cameras", published 1960(1951 TV series)]]-03-01, assigned to Jayo Corp.
- ^ a b New Business Tool: the TelePromTer,” Business Screen Magazine, V. 145. No. 1, (February 1954), pp. 122–113
- ^ Help Center, TeleprompterPAD. "What is a Presidential Teleprompter?".
- ^ George E. Condon, Radio and Television Editor, On The Air, Cleveland Plain Dealer, May 13, 1955, p. 14
- ^ Political Burlesque Blamed on TV Dubbing, Cleveland Plain Dealer, August 20, 1955, P. 19
- ^ Cinecraft Productions, Fourth Production Review, Business Screen Magazine, v. 15, no. 1 February 1954, p. 96 https://digital.hagley.org/businessscreen?page=4
- ^ Hagley Library has digitized a number of the Ohio Story TV episodes and posted them on their research website. https://digital.hagley.org/2019227
- ^ See, for example, the Republic Steel Corporation “Building Economic Understanding series https://digital.hagley.org/islandora/search/%22Building%20economic%20understanding%22?type=edismax&cp=islandora%3A2623872
- ^ "Ike Uses Pair of Teleprompters". Cleveland Plain Dealer, January 6, 1954, p. 13.
- ^ "A Brief History of the Teleprompter". Archived from the original on 2013-12-28. Retrieved 2013-07-22.
- ^ Alexander, Neta; Keren, Tali (September 27, 2021). "Paper, glass, algorithm: teleprompters and the invisibility of screens". Journal of Visual Culture. 20 (2): 395–417. doi:10.1177/14704129211026358. ISSN 1470-4129. S2CID 238220479.
- ^ "The Emmy Awards - NATIONAL TELEVISION ACADEMY ANNOUNCES 59th ANNUAL WINNERS OF TECHNOLOGY & ENGINEERING EMMY® AWARDS". January 7, 2012. Archived from the original on 2012-01-07.
- ^ "Reuters | Breaking International News & Views". Reuters.
- ^ Rucker, Philip (October 19, 2011). "Republicans mock Obama's teleprompter use". The Washington Post. Archived from the original on October 19, 2011. Retrieved September 1, 2024.
- ^ a b Laurie Brown, The Teleprompter Manual (Pleasant Ridge, Michigan: The Difference Press, 2006), pp. 5–6. ISBN 0-9767761-0-3.
- ^ Campbell, Menzies (2014). Menzies Campbell: My Autobiography. Hodder & Stoughton. ISBN 9781444796643. Retrieved 27 May 2018.
{{cite book}}
:|work=
ignored (help) - ^ a b Atkinson, Max (24 September 2009). "Clegg's conference speech: 'definitely OK, absolutely fine, without any doubt not bad'". Retrieved 27 May 2018.
- ^ Nobile, Jr, Phil (7 July 2017). "The Interrotron: How Errol Morris Changed The Way Documentaries Watch Us". Birth.Movies.Death.
- ^ Pavlus, John (30 September 2016). "Errol Morris's Secret Weapon for Unsettling Interviews: The Interrotron". Fast Company.
External links
[edit]- 1966 Cinécraft production film demonstrating the use of multi-cameras with teleprompters. Source: Hagley Library digital archive
- Kevin Martin, Innovation At Cinécraft: Multi-Camera Production For Television. Hagley Collection Research and News
- Joseph Stromberg, A Brief History of the Teleprompter. Smithsonian Magazine, October 22, 2012