Saturday, October 15, 2016

The Thanksgiving Football Game

Last state of grace afternoon, on the flat-screen TV in the living room, was WGAL TV pass on 8, an NBC affiliate from Lancaster, PA. It is always shown in my grandparents house at dark. They were showing NFL football that night the Seattle Seahawks against the San Francisco 49ers a bouncing that transferers were name it the football event of the stratum when the real event isnt until late January/early February (Super roller 49). I couldnt resolve if I either wanted to watch the game with my associate Nathan (hes more into football than me) or throw up in the bathroom. Eventually, I took any(prenominal) Pepto-Bismol and decided to watch as much of the game as I possibly could. The all told family was not dressed for the game, still then again, they didnt exact to be. Nausea aside, my family and I were having a decent Thanksgiving.\nWGALs broadcast of the game wasnt forward-looking whenever it came down to graphics, tho it successfully got the message across. The pr esentation was strong, with acutely visuals (a normal for football games on high-definition TV), and NBC use plain but clean backgrounds for their transitions from game to invoke, advert to game and so forth. discourse of adverts, they had some big picture trailers, one of them being the forthcoming film Jurassic World, which was passim the day, even during the game. It had me excited and I felt quite nostalgic, something I wish I could tell about that dreary nett Hobbit film. And the less I fancy about Peter move LIVE, the better. When it came down to showing certain players, they often used pictures of the players (i.e. Richard Sherman, Colin Kaepernic, etc.) digitally imposed with the half-color/half-chrome backgrounds at the bottom of the screen, while the game (highlights and all) took up the rest of the screen. In some cases, their statistics were displayed. The camera rarely moved much, except for when individual caught the ball, made a touchdown and such, which . ..

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.