My backpack for crew work. Featuring a crew patch from Denmark's Metal Magic festival.
My backpack for crew work. Featuring a crew patch from Denmark's Metal Magic festival.

Back to Skool

October 2025

Back to Skool

With kit bag eagerly shouldered, I prepare to start my second year at the Academy of Live Technology. Returning to finish off my Foundation degree in Live Event Production, I’ll be specialising in Audio and Visuals instead of doing a little bit of everything. Although it seems, despite the long summer, that I’ve barely ever left campus.

After surviving a wild three weeks in Denmark, I came back to teach an early-teens Creative Skills summer school in whatever space we could sequester. Showcasing a bit of audio but mostly lighting, with a Willy Wonka theme indulging my penchant for psychedelia. The kids enjoyed getting to play on professional kit with nary a rhyming mishap, and I picked up a few tips and tricks myself – as well as working on some new Trismegistus Hex material during the downtime.

The big news, of course, is that Production Park are currently hosting The Voice UK in our studios. The campus has been aflurry with ITV’s production crew, necessitating flexibility all around the shooting schedule. The crew have offered plenty of work openings, with a few of my fellow students learning the Production Runner ropes. My own contributions were wisely relegated to keeping the car parks running smoothly once the audience rolled up.

Smaller scale, but thinking forward, I’ve been lurking at seminars presented by our CoSTAR LiveLab facility, a Research and Development lab in association with the University of York. In recent months, film industry professionals and researchers have visited to discuss the encroachment of AI (generative and otherwise) into the creative process. With such disruption self-evident, questions of ethics and responsibility have come to the fore as the industry seeks a more holistic, nuanced solution.


My own projects still tick along, with various collaborations outside of campus coming into the fold and new opportunities escalated to interested ears. I confess there have been many conflicting commitments drawing my attention, and the challenge of late has been to coax all these spinning plates into proximity. Working on one aspect now advances the others, and it is prudent to remember that – unlike the wider world’s indifference – they want me to succeed here.

By example I offer everyone my own encouragement and support. With my position as Wellbeing Executive ratified, this past week I’ve assisted freshers in finding their feet to navigate a campus very different to expectations. New blood is vital for the event industry, especially as many veterans changed career or retired during the ‘House Arrest’ years, and it is important to be welcoming.

This generation are as bright, enthusiastic, and eager to achieve as ever – although they do seem a bit quieter than our rowdy lot!

There’s always something going on at the epicentre of opportunity, and I’m thrilled to dive back in and embrace the adventures to come. For the next three terms and maybe, hopefully, beyond.

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