Know the features of Teleprompter and How does it work

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What is a teleprompter?

 The teleprompter is a valuable tool for leaders and speakers.

  The teleprompter has two translucent mirrors.  LCD monitors facing the ceiling use letters ranging in size from 56 points to 72 points.  The letters from the monitor are in front of the speaker in the mirror.


If you have a teleprompter operator who knows exactly the speed of the speaker, the thing is awesome.

 The same words appear on both sides of the teleprompter.  When the speaker looks at the words on the side mirror screen, it looks like he is looking at different parts of the audience.

As the speaker is able to look directly into the lens while reading the script, the teleprompter creates the illusion that the speaker has memorized the speech or speaks automatically, looking directly into the camera lens.


Notes or queue cards, on the other hand, require the presenter to look at them instead of looking at the lens, which creates the impression of distraction.

Instead of looking at paper, you can read with a teleprompter. Teleprompter is an important example of technological development.  The words in the speech will slowly flow on the mirror-like surface.

The leader uses a slightly higher technology than the prompter used for television news presentation.

 The speaker can see the words flowing on the teleprompter, but for someone else it is nothing more than a mirror surface.

 Very few people use teleprompter skillfully.


Teleprompter makes communication more comfortable.  It gives the impression that the speaker is a leader or has memorized his speech.

Teleprompters that are not immediately visible and tilted 45 degrees to read are a favorite of many generations of political leaders today.

Things are clean in terms of precise gestures.  It's hard for the audience to quickly find the new version of promptors on glass.


The speech can be seen from the screen behind the lecturer or from a higher stand.  The audience in front cannot see this transparent screen. 

There will be a teleprompter operator who will carefully control the speed according to the speed of the speaker and scroll through the text. 


During the conversation, the speaker turns from one teleprompter to another.  It seems like the audience is looking in a different direction.

 If the speaker slows down, the operator will slow down accordingly.  For example, if a part of a speech is praised, there will be applause.  Then it will pause.  Then the operator will also stop.

Although there are some modern versions that do not even require operators, it is difficult for VIPs.

  The prompt operator also needs to talk to the camera crew.  Sometimes the speech may need to be edited.


 Some critics say that those who rely on teleprompter are not really leaders but demonstrators.

 But the success of a speech depends on what the leader says and how he speaks.

 The teleprompter is just a tool to help you perform.  The prompter is unable to control what is being said.


 Preaching with a prompter is an art.  It is not enough to just read it, its meaning should reach the people.

 Ability to write or control speech.  The content of the speech is the ability of the leader.

 Speeches at the International Science Economic Forum should include accurate presentation of facts and information.

That is why most world leaders now rely on teleprompter.


AutoQ is a system that allows viewers to watch news and programs on television and read the script.

Reading like this gives the impression that the presenter is interacting directly with the audience.

 The text is displayed in large letters on a screen attached to the front of the camera lens facing the presenter or speaker.


With the help of the tool the presenters can manually control the speed of the autocue.

Leaders also use autoclaves or teleprompters to address the public at official events.

 Technology is evolving.  From the first mechanical paper roll teleprompter used by television presenters and speakers at 1952 U.S. political conventions, to the dual glass teleprompter used by TV presenters and 1964 U.S. conventions,  and the 1982 computer-based large rolls.

The four-prompter system for U.S. conventions, which incorporated the Stage Confidence Monitor and the Inset Lectern Monitor, replaced the glass teleprompter at the UK political conferences in 2006 with several large off-stage confidence monitors. 

TelePrompTer in the US, Commonwealth, and Autocue in some European countries were originally trademarks, but have become common trademarks used for any such display device.

When the Civil Rights Act of 1964 was announced, U.S. President Lyndon B.  Johnson uses a teleprompter.


History of teleprompter  

The TelePrompTer Corporation was founded in the 1950s by Fred Barton, Jr., Hubert Schlafly and Irving Berlin Kahn. 

Barton was an actor who suggested the idea of ​​a teleprompter as a tool to help television presenters memorize large volumes of material in a short period of time. 

In 1950, Schlafly built the first teleprompter.  It was merely a mechanical device operated by a hidden technician located near the camera. 

The script, in inch-high letters, was printed on a paper scroll using a special electric typewriter, which was adapted to read by the presenter, and the machines were rented for $ 30 an hour. 

In 1952, former President Herbert Hoover used a teleprompter to deliver a Shuffle-designed speech by former President Herbert Hoover to address the 1952 Republican National Convention in Chicago. 

U.S. Gov. Paul A.  Dover spoke at the Democratic National Convention in Chicago in 1952, using a mechanical-roll teleprompter on a long pole held by a TV technician, and a small teleprompter in front of the speaker at the 1952 Republican National Convention.  Mechanical prompters were used until the end of 1992. 

On January 4, 1954, Dwight Eisenhower became the first president to use a teleprompter for a State of the Union address.  

Jess Oppenheimer, who created I Love Lucy and worked with its producer and lead author for the first five years, developed the first "in-the-lens" prompter and received US patents for its work.   . 

This system uses a mirror to reflect a script on a piece of glass placed in front of the camera lens, thus allowing the reader to look directly at the camera.  Lucy Ball and Desi Arnas first used it to read commercials on camera in 1953. 



The first personal computer - based teleprompter, Compu = Prompt, appeared in 1982.  In Los Angeles, California, Courtney M.  Goodin and Lawrence b. 

It was invented and marketed by Abrams.  Custom software and specially redesigned camera hardware worked on the Atari 800 personal computer, which featured smooth hardware-assisted scrolling. 

Their company is still in business at ProPrompt, Inc., 2021.  Paper-based teleprompting companies such as Electronic Script Prompt, QTV, and Telescript followed suit, developing their own software many years later, when TexSouth had computers capable of scrolling smoothly. 

In January 2010 Compu = Prompt received the Emmy Award for Technology and Engineering for "Pioneering Development in Electronic Prompting". 

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