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| Home » Jul/Aug 08 » Sectionals » DCI on TV | Print this page | Email this page ![]() DCI on TVBy Dennis DeLucia In the spring of 1994, Tom Blair, producer/director of the telecast of DCI finals on PBS and ESPN2, asked me if I would consider joining the on-camera broadcast team. I welcomed the opportunity to work with Tom, Michael Cesario and, of course, Steve Rondinaro. Fifteen years later, we’re still doing it although in 2008 we will be in theaters only (for quarterfinals) and not on television. Rondinaro is, in person, exactly as he is on television: warm, articulate, knowledgeable and passionate about drum corps and network news. Rondinaro joined the Squires Drum and Bugle Corps when he was 9 years old and stayed until 21. At the same time, he pursued a broadcast career. At 15, he began on radio, then worked his way through television. In 1995, Rondinaro and his wife bought a radio station in Boone, N.C., then sold it and bought a local television station. Last year, he took a job as anchor for an ABC affiliate in Wilmington, N.C. I asked Rondinaro about his experience on the DCI telecast. DD: When did you become involved with the DCI telecast? SR: 1979 in Birmingham. Five hours live on PBS! It was hot and exciting and challenging, to say the least. DD: How different is the broadcast on ESPN? SR: The main difference is that ESPN wanted us to explain the competitive side of drum corps much more than PBS, so our commentary took on a more analytical tone. DD: Last year The Cadets’ George Hopkins pulled the corps off the field while you were live to movie theaters. How did you handle that? SR: I changed to “breaking news” mode, and my brain split many ways. We watched the field live not knowing exactly what was happening; we watched the monitor to see what Tom was sending to the theaters; we talked about the situation in the booth; I created questions for you and John Madden; and I listened for info in my earpiece. Whew! By the way, I do think that George did the right thing for the safety of his corps. DD: Any highlights and/or lowlights? SR: The highlights have to include Maynard Ferguson playing a soprano bugle, Rita Moreno’s enthusiasm about drum corps, Curt Gowdy’s professional aura and the surprise ceremony commemorating my 25th year on the broadcast. The only lowlight is not having a telecast to do this year! About the Author Dennis DeLucia is a percussion teacher, arranger, clinician and judge. A former member of the West Point Band, he is best known for his successes with championship corps and bands. |
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And no thanks to putting it back on PBS; that means I have to watch brunette with a facelift talk in between corps asking me for money directly... I'd rather just see it as a TV show. Especially if they are going to keep showing cheerleading on ESPN! At least they'd have two football spinoff sports rivaling each other.
If they really want to take it to a new level, they should make it the best reality show on TV and follow a corps every summer and show it's fight to finals... there are 3 or 4 cooking reality shows, several on sports, some about relationships, family, etc... we need
Where are the good ideas DCI? Why do you want so much to be unpopular and unseen? Why do you (as another person writing in wrote) suck so bad?
If money is an issue, then why not put it online? Offer the entire Quarterfinals and Finals as a package. I'm sure plenty would pay for a broadcast quality broadcast of ENTIRE shows. You could offer Quarters and Finals or just Finals, and all the many DC fans from all over the US could have a chance to see the awesome things these kids are doing.
Do the right thing DCI!