• Home
  • Sections
    • Arts & Entertainment
    • Opinions
    • Sports
    • School News
    • Town & World
  • Archive
  • Contact Us
  • Tips
  • Spotlight
Search
68 F
Chapel Hill
Saturday, June 7, 2025
  • Home
  • Sections
    • Arts & Entertainment
    • Opinions
    • Sports
    • School News
    • Town & World
  • Archive
  • Contact Us
  • Tips
  • Spotlight
Proconian
  • Sports

Students go behind the Scenes for ESPN’s College GameDay

By
Henry Ghitelman
-
October 18, 2023
Share on Facebook
Tweet on Twitter
An ESPN technician works on the network's College GameDay show. College GameDay visited Duke University's Wallace Wade Stadium on September 30 for the first time ever. PHOTO CREDIT: HENRY GHITELMAN

College GameDay, a weekly show in which a select group of ESPN analysts travel to college campuses to cover the most notable football and basketball games of the season, is a tradition dating back to 1987.

On September 30, College GameDay came to Duke University’s Wallace Wade Stadium for the first time ever as the 17th-ranked Duke Blue Devils played the 11th-ranked Fighting Irish of Notre Dame in Durham.

“The Duke students seemed to be very excited about having their first GameDay for football,” CTE teacher Kevin Schoden said.  “They were pumped up and enthusiastic about what was happening; there was a pretty large crowd.”

Four students in Schoden’s Honors Adobe classes were given exclusive backstage access to the filming and production of College GameDay at Duke. Schoden has previously accompanied students to College GameDay for the UNC-Duke basketball rivalry.

“My students seemed to be pretty excited and started taking pictures right off the bat,” Schoden said. “They asked all kinds of question about editing, about how long production takes, about how many cameras there were and what they were used for.  They had good questions, and they learned how everything was filmed.”

Schoden’s students were eager to document the experience, taking pictures of fans in their team colors, the state-of-the-art production trailer, and even ESPN analyst Lee Corso wearing a leprechaun costume before predicting that Notre Dame would beat the Blue Devils; Corso’s prediction came true as the Fighting Irish wound up defeating Duke 21-17.

Junior Jackson Norris, a student in Schoden’s Adobe Visual Design II class, was fascinated by the number of cameras that were used for the show’s production. “There were a ton of cameras that might get used for one or two shots and that’s it,” he said.

While College GameDay embodies the soul and spirit of college football, seeing its production from backstage showed the students just how much goes into its production. 

“Seeing their creativity from the production side of things inspires me to edit my videos in my Adobe class with more of an energetic vibe,” sophomore Ray Wambugu, a student in Schoden’s Adobe Video Design class, said. 

GameDay production crews rolled into Durham early on in the week, setting up stages and shooting locations in time for the early Saturday kickoff at Wallace Wade Stadium. 

By the time students and fans showed up, decked out in their school colors and wearing the obligatory Home Depot helmets (Home Depot sponsors ESPN’s College GameDay), the ESPN crew was in place to capture the banners and signs that are a hallmark of College GameDay. 

“People go all out for their college, and they show their spirit in a very big way,” Norris said. 

SHARE
Facebook
Twitter
Henry Ghitelman

RELATED ARTICLESMORE FROM AUTHOR

Town & World

Phillips eighth grader publishes book on Durham’s Hispanic community with father

Town & World

Chapel Hill High School alumnus to open bakery this year

Opinions

Creating a sound policy: the case for allowing headphones in schools

Featured Posts

Town & World

Phillips eighth grader publishes book on Durham’s Hispanic community with father

Reagan Martz - January 31, 2025
0
Last year, Alegría Rojas-Patino, an eighth-grade student at Philips Middle School, took an art class where she began creating a comic about the history...

Chapel Hill High School alumnus to open bakery this year

January 17, 2025

Creating a sound policy: the case for allowing headphones in schools

January 15, 2025

Ninth Annual North Carolina Chinese Lantern Festival Returns to Cary, NC

January 14, 2025

Student Government hosts inaugural bingo event just before winter break

January 9, 2025
- Advertisement -
ABOUT US
Proconian has been the official school newspaper of Chapel Hill High School since 1931; the publication was printed in its first 83 years before delivering its content digitally. All stories are written by students unless otherwise noted.
Contact us: contact@proconian.com
FOLLOW US
  • Archive
  • Contact
  • Tips
© Chapel Hill High School Proconian
MORE STORIES

Women’s soccer team finishes regular season undefeated, advances to state semifinals

June 6, 2023

Football team finishes the 2021 season as Big 8 conference champions

April 28, 2021
Edit with Live CSS
Save
Write CSS OR LESS and hit save. CTRL + SPACE for auto-complete.