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Veteran intercom specialist Michael Gilman at work with the RTS system deployed for the NFL Draft broadcast from Las Vegas.

AY Productions Turns To RTS For This Year’s NFL Draft In Las Vegas

Owner Aaron Young designed the system, which was centered around an ADAM frame with about 100 channels of RVON for long-haul transport to connect all facilities.

Staged in Las Vegas for the first time, the 2022 NFL Draft returned to its traditional three-day live event this past April, with the NFL Network bringing in AY Productions to create and deploy an RTS-based intercom system to connect all facilities, including control rooms, stage sets, cameras, and talent.

Owner Aaron Young designed the system, which was centered around an ADAM frame with about 100 channels of RVON for long-haul transport. “Our backbone is built in Dante, both on the intercom and the audio side,” Young explains. “We leveraged three OMI-64 cards in the ADAM frame, which gives us redundancy across Hydra and Dante. We also used a lot of RTS Digital Beltpacks, which we love for their channel density, plus about 30 KP-5032 keypanels.”

AY Productions assembled a team of comms specialists for the event, including Michael Gilman, CTO of Gilman Technologies, a veteran intercom specialist whose primary duties focused on programming and distributing comms resources as required.

“Technically, all of us on the comms team worked for NFL Network as host, but Aaron Young was the one who designed the system and assembled the group,” notes Gilman. “Since we were working with multiple production trucks and networks, the flexibility of ADAM frames enabled us to tie everything together into a seamless system. For large, live sports events like this, RTS ADAM is the gold standard in our industry.”

Because intercoms are critical to all other areas of production, the comms team arrived four days before the draft. Working on Gamecreek Video’s Encore OB truck suite, they began with gear prep. “We start by opening the ADAM frames and installing the cards we need,” says Gilman. “Everything gets labeled according to the plan. We configure everything, then fire it up and test it before it gets installed elsewhere on site. Then we fine-tune the programming as the broadcast comes together.”

For the draft, there were four production control rooms, one in Las Vegas and three offsite. The primary on-air set was literally built above the iconic fountain/lake at the Bellagio. In addition, there were several more broadcast sets and announce positions, along with specialty cameras like cranes and blimps.

Together wit Young, Niraj Patel, and Jeff Barwise of the comms team, Gilman was charged with programming the system to accommodate any likely routing scenario, with Marc Kennedy taking the role of on-set wireless comms specialist. Throughout the three-day event, the AY Productions team focused on keeping everyone communicating seamlessly.

“We call it Fireman Duty,” says Gilman. “It’s essentially monitoring the directors, producers and camera channels to keep up with their needs. Most of it is coordinated ahead of time, but this is live TV. The stakes are high, and things can get hectic. We’re tracking maybe a half-dozen conversations to satisfy everyone’s requests quickly, hopefully within a few seconds. To do that, we had a row of three or four RTS keypanels programmed to handle any likely request.”

He adds that in his view, RTS ADAM matrix frames are the default intercom backbone for large broadcast events for their core functionality, reliability, and modularity: “The ADAM frame is, by far, the most used for large sports events. Its modularity allows us to make modifications quickly, ensure stability and redundancy, then return the system to its original state quickly after the show is complete.”

RTS equipment list:
ADAM digital intercom matrix
RVON VoIP connectivity cards for ADAM matrix
OMI-64 matrix interface cards for ADAM matrix
KP-5032 keypanels
DBP digital beltpacks

RTS
AY Productions
Gilman Technologies

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