Louisville Medicine Volume 65, Issue 2 | Page 16

FEATURE (continued from page 12) some that were really good at their jobs. It worked out well for me because I had more manpower, and it worked out well for Ralph as it was great to have a program for the department.” The Louisville Health shoots took place on Friday evenings, one show per week. But as the crew got comfortable, they got more daring. A few years in, the show began filming special episodes on-location. Health found its feet on public access television, Dr. Tuckson started planning ways to reach a broader audience. He tried setting up the show with a commercial Louisville broadcast station, but found it unsatisfying. “I had to pay for air time and they didn’t help with getting advertisers for us.” The difficulties in making a consistently high quality product led to a collaboration with the University of Louisville Informa- tion Technologies Department which lasted from 2000 to 2015. The studio at U of L was in the basement of the Communications building, Strickler Hall. That production area (and classroom) contained three cameras and an array of better equipment from which the show could build. Professor Ralph Merkel served as a producer of the show for several years upon its arrival to the university and then as Executive Producer from 2007 to 2015. “Ralph has a background in broadcast journalism, and he brought a certain level of sophistication and ideas on how to approach things which I found very helpful,” Dr. Tuckson said. “When Dr. Tuckson came to U of L, I think he wanted to up his game and make it more highly produced,” Merkel said. “In the late 1990s, he struck a deal with the University to produce it with funding from The African American Health Initiative. I think he’s sort of been on a mission to educate average folks about health problems and solutions.” For years, Louisville Health flourished at U of L. To reach a larg- er audience than PBS Channel 15 would allow, Dr. Tuckson and Professor Merkel contacted KET in the hopes that they would be interested in airing the show. They were, and a partnership soon formed where Louisville Health was shown on KET-2. One of the benefits of working on U of L’s campus was a constant influx of young people interested in the program who were students in Merkel’s classroom. Any given year of the programs’ time at U of L found five or six students on staff, working both in front of and behind the camera. “I’m glad we had the students in there to help,” Dr. Tuckson said. “Most were very committed to learning a task and doing it well. Some others were very nonchalant and took it for granted, but there were 14 LOUISVILLE MEDICINE “We went to Pikeville and did two shows there,” Merkel said. “We visited a farm and did a whole show about eating locally grown food. We shot one show in front of a live audience in the Conference Center of the Rudd Heart & Lung Center at Jewish Hospital. That one was fun to do, and challenging. We had to lug everything there and edit it afterwards. But doing a show remotely is more visually interesting than people sitting at a set.” Around 2008, KET approached Dr. Tuckson about taking the program statewide (KET-2 is only available in half of Kentucky). However, that required a name change: What better way to evolve the show geographically than to rebrand Louisville Health into Kentucky Health? While on an unrelated trip to Pikeville, Dr. Tuckson happened to be sitting next to a member of the all-female bluegrass group, Coaltown Dixie. Just by striking up a conversation, he found the perfect music for his show. “She told me she was in the band, and I asked if I could use some of their music for the show. It was a perfect mesh,” Dr. Tuckson recalled. “When we came back to Pikeville for filming, we taped them as well and ended up using two different songs, one for opening the show and another for closing. I thought it was important for a show called Kentucky Health to feature music from the region.” For 15 years, Kentucky Health called the basement of Strickler Hall home until KET approached and offered to produce and tape the show at their Louisville studio. Now, instead of simply sending the final product to the station, all recording and editing could be done in-house. The first season under KET production was in 2015. KET Health Producer and Outreach Coordinator Laura Krueger had been a liaison with Kentucky Health for several years before the show’s migration. Now she serves as line producer, making sure the show is polished and punctual. “On another show, my job would be to come up with guests, shape the content and write questions but, with Kentucky Health, Dr. Tuckson does that,” Krueger said. “Kentucky Health is his show and his vision, and that’s the way it should be.” Today, shows are planned months in advance and then shot two or three weeks before the air date. The topics vary widely. In the last few months of 2016 alone, Kentucky Health covered topics such as radiation therapy, pancreatitis, choosing a health care provider and addiction prevention. “This is the thing that’s amazing about Kentucky Health,” Krueger said. “Dr. Tuckson and the guests have the ability to get so specific.