Word: hrtvã
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...single and are looking for soulmates,” said Sanyee Yuan ’12, a writer and publicist for the show, The time commitment for contestants is low, Coleman said. Filming will last about one hour and each episode, which will be posted online at HRTV??s Web site, will last ten to fifteen minutes. According to HRTV Co-President Derek M. Flanzraich ’10, “Love @ Harvard” is part of greater changes at HRTV which is seeking to show a larger number of entertainment shows. HRTV already produces several...
...show is arguably HRTV??s most successful program, a “kind of a flagship program for HRTV,” says Flanzraich. Both Greaves and Hall attribute the recent success of the show to the visible increase in the quality of its content. “I don’t want to sound really snobby, but I feel like we produce something of a good quality, but we also produce it quite frequently,” Hall says. “To have it be impressive in both a humor...
...Harvard Time is still nominally a part of HRTV, the program now functions autonomously. Skinner notes that “HRTV is more like the umbrella that helps everybody get their sea legs.” After initially helping get On Harvard Time off the ground through financial support, HRTV??s role has diminished as the show has taken...
...campus-wide entertainment. “HRTV is open to everyone, and anyone can access it,” she said. According to Koenigs, creating a broad-based video-sharing Web site has been a goal of HRTV for some time. The group hopes CrimsonClips will both expand HRTV??s scope and help archive visual arts performances and events at Harvard. “We want to capture the Harvard experience; we’re losing so many great events,” he said. “The curtain goes down, and you never see them again...
...said Younger, also interviewed in Adams. “We’re pretty angry.” Brian M. Kaufman ’10, on the other hand, said he empathized with the striking writers, a perspective he said he gained as a writer for student-run HRTV??s “On Harvard Time.” “Obviously, I would rather the shows be on because they are entertaining, but at the same time...I completely understand that writing a TV show takes a lot work, and not to pay them for their...