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Monmouth arts scene: Now playing in your living
room
Arts council, Brookdale team up for monthly cable
show on the arts
BY KATHY HALL
Correspondent
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| Host
John Bukovec interviews Robyn Ellenbogen (third
from left), director of education for the Monmouth
County Arts Council, and participants in the
council’s Teen Arts Connection program, (l-r)
Grace Chung, Sharline Rosales and Luke Holle,
during a segment of “Arts in Monmouth County.” |
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When Monmouth County Arts Council (MCAC) Executive
Director Mary Eileen Fouratt looked at her agency’s new
five-year plan, the idea of producing a monthly television show on
the arts seemed unattainable.
MCAC, Monmouth University and the Monmouth
County Planning Board had worked with ArtsMarket, a national
consulting firm with expertise in cultural development, to create
the plan titled “A Blueprint for the Arts, the 2005-2010
Cultural Arts Plan for Monmouth County,” which focused on
fostering and facilitating ongoing cultural development throughout
the county.
“A major goal in ‘Blue Print for the Arts’
was to increase the visibility of the arts,” Fouratt explained.
“One of our ‘out-there’ dreams was to have a TV show, but we
hadn’t gotten anywhere with it.”
Shortly after the plan was presented at Monmouth
University in April, Fouratt received a call from Cheryl Cummings,
executive director of Brookdale Television (BTV).
Located on the Lincroft campus of Brookdale
Community College, BTV produces and broadcasts telecourse and
public affairs programs 24 hours a day, seven days a week on
Comcast Cable Channel 21. Brookdale students work as camera
operators, technical directors, lighting grips and stage hands
under the supervision of media professionals.
“She [Cummings] had gotten a copy of the plan
and said, ‘We can help you with this,’ ”
Fouratt said.
Brookdale had been producing a monthly arts
program titled “Creative Conversations.”
“They liked the concept but were having a
problem lining up the guests,” Fouratt explained. “That part
was easy for us.”
A co-production partnership was formed, in which
Brookdale took care of the production details and got the show on
the air and MCAC provided the guests and helped with the content.
Lisa Cureton, membership director for Brookdale Public Radio, 90.5
The Night, produces the show. John Bukovec, Brookdale Drama
Department faculty member and host of “Creative
Conversations,” is the host.
“Arts in Monmouth County” is part of
MCAC’s marketing strategy, which also includes a new glossy
magazine titled “State-of-the-Art,” a Web site [www.monmouthartscouncil.org]
and weekly e-mail “blasts,” which provide listings of arts
events throughout the county.
“The goals for ‘Arts in Monmouth County’
are to get the word out about what we are doing, further our reach
into the community about the services offered by the arts council,
as well as being able to publicize some of our member groups and
the cultural offerings they have,” said MCAC board President
Peter J. Lyden III.
“This show provides another avenue where
people can find out about the arts council and connect with the
Web site. It will hit people who are channel surfing or who watch
it on purpose,” Fouratt added.
“Arts in Monmouth County” is repeated every
Monday and Saturday at 1 p.m. and 9 p.m. on Brookdale Television.
A new half-hour show will be produced each month.
Non-Comcast subscribers may contact MCAC for VHS
copies of the programs that can be borrowed or watched at the
council’s Red Bank office.
January’s episode, an introduction to the
Monmouth County Arts Council, features Fouratt and Terri Thomas,
MCAC’s community arts director.
MCAC is one of only three county arts councils
organized as private nonprofits rather than as a part of county
government. (Morris and Sussex counties are the other two.)
“We are a private, nonprofit organization that
is supported by the Board of Chosen Freeholders, the state arts
council, the Geraldine R. Dodge Foundation and other
foundations,” Fouratt said on the program.
Member groups, which consist of nonprofit arts
organizations and other nonprofits that have arts programs, elect
the board of directors that governs the agency.
Individuals, who may join MCAC as nonvoting
members, receive access to programs and workshops, and a
subscription to “State of the Art.”
“We are a wide umbrella for anyone interested
in the arts” Fouratt said. “If you think of yourself as an
artist, you should be part of the arts council.”
February’s program explores MCAC’s
educational programming and features Robyn Ellenbogen, MCAC arts
education director, and three students from MCAC’s Teen Arts
Connection, Sharline Rosales, who is now attending Brookdale, Luke
Holle from Red Bank Regional High School, and Grace Chung from
Monmouth Regional High School.
The Teen Arts Connection is open to 13- to
19-year-old artists in any discipline. The program will also
provide information on the upcoming Teen Arts Festival
co-sponsored by MCAC and Brookdale.
Although the first two shows of “Arts in
Monmouth County” are in the “talking heads” format, future
programs will include clips of performances.
“We want to be able to show the art,”
Fouratt said. “That requires a little bit more planning in
getting the filming done ahead of time.
“We want to look at the arts in the broadest
sense of the word. We want to hit lots of different disciplines
and lots of different aspects of what the arts are in Monmouth
County,” she added.
“Priority would be given to member groups, but
if there’s a broader arts or business arts event, we want to
explore it.”
Ideas for upcoming shows include a survey of the
county’s theater community from amateur to equity, an overview
of local arts groups’ educational programs, how the arts help
with economic development and tourism, and a look at the vast
variety of ethnic and cultural festivals in the county. Municipal
arts programs will also be promoted.
Brookdale students also benefit from the
programming partnership.
“Brookdale television prides itself on being
an hands-on training facility for its students,” Cureton
explained in an e-mail. “The creation and the production of
‘Arts in Monmouth County’ help BCC to provide students, in
many cases, with television production skills that can be
immediately transferred to the marketplace.”
Cable companies can provide three different
types of access channels as part of their programming, according
to Lyden, who is senior director, franchise and government affairs
for Comcast, in addition to serving as MCAC board president.
Public Access channels are set aside for anybody
who wants to provide content with the cable company setting the
technical rules. Government access channels are programmed by
local government, and educational access channels are turned over
to an educational institution.
In addition to the Brookdale channel, Comcast
provides community college channels in Ocean and Mercer counties.
“In our franchise negotiations with the
municipalities, we provided for a educational access channel as
well as a public access channel.” Lyden explained. “This is
something we weren’t obligated to provide, but the colleges
expressed an interest and some of the towns also said they were
interested in us providing this to the local community
colleges.”
As of 2005, Comcast had 75,000 subscribers in
Monmouth County, according to Lyden.
Cable show viewership is not measured by
ratings, but Fouratt is “amazed” at how many people say they
saw her on TV and are learning about the county’s arts
resources.
“There’s just such a range,” she said,
“It’s not all high-brow stuff either. Some of it is very
accessible. We’ve got it all.”
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