Zidek Bringing The Action Home

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Published: July 28, 2010 12:12 pm EDT

Jeff Zidek, the noted multimedia journalist who serves as an information specialist for the Pennsylvania Racing Commissions, has come up with a real winner in his latest project

– mounting a small camera on the starting gate, and on the helmets of drivers, to give fans, seasoned and potential, an up-close and personal look at racing on a fair track, this one the near-circular track at Hughesville, Pennsylvania on July 21.

Starter Clarence Martin

Starter Clarence Martin serves as the narrator for the segment in which a camera is mounted on the gate, directing horsemen both on and off the track. The footage captures the field being called to the gate and trailers in the second tier being watched. Martin is seen 'giving the word' at a track which leaves a starter and his driver little room for error.

Driver Roger Hammer

Roger Hammer, the 'King of the County Fairs,' takes part in the longest segment, which chronicles a typical Hammer day at the fair races. He is seen warming up one horse; going back to the barn; putting the race bike on another and going on the track; trying to direct the traffic flow; going wire-to-wire once the race does go; going back to his stable and putting the same bike on a horse in the next race; asking a groom to have a diet soda ready for him when he gets back; jawing with 'the boys;' going wire-to-wire again – and then, atypically, grabbing the soda and leaving the fairgrounds early (for a court date for, of all things, speeding).

Driver Bobby Rougeaux

Up-and-coming Bobby Rougeaux -- nicknamed 'C'Mon Bobby!' for the cries his cheering section of the Rocky Top Stables puts out at different points of the race -- then took the Hammer-helmet-cam and wore it for a few races. Rougeaux had the best line of the day: “Hammer’s helmet fit you?” another driver asked, to which Rougeaux, deadpan, replies, “Well, I had to shave a little bald spot up front.”

For Rougeaux’s first race, Zidek figured that Rougeaux would set the pace and turned the camera 180 degrees, which meant you were seeing behind Rougeaux during the race – a good angle, it turned out, because nobody caught him. The video ends with Rougeaux going out for his next race with the camera turned normally.

Zidek deftly cuts in a few still pictures, such as the winners circle picture with the large Rocky Top contingent, and even cleverly places picture-in-picture footage from a pan camera angle into the tight-in helmet signal, for a further widening of perspective.

(With files from the PRC)

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