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・ Jeff Granger
・ Jeff Grant
・ Jeff Grau
・ Jeff Gravenhorst
・ Jeff Gray
・ Jeff Gray (baseball, born 1963)
・ Jeff Gray (baseball, born 1981)
・ Jeff Grayer
・ Jeff Grayshon
・ Jeff Grayson
・ Jeff Grayson (sportscaster)
・ Jeff Greason
・ Jeff Green
・ Jeff Green (basketball)
・ Jeff Green (comedian)
Jeff Green (multimedia artist)
・ Jeff Green (racing driver)
・ Jeff Green (writer)
・ Jeff Greenberg
・ Jeff Greene
・ Jeff Greenfield
・ Jeff Greenlaw
・ Jeff Greenstein
・ Jeff Greenwald
・ Jeff Greer
・ Jeff Greinke
・ Jeff Grieve
・ Jeff Griffin
・ Jeff Grimes
・ Jeff Groscost


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Jeff Green (multimedia artist) : ウィキペディア英語版
Jeff Green (multimedia artist)

Jeffrey Stuart Green (born June 21, 1956) is a Canadian author, playwright, producer, and director, who has worked in a variety of media including radio, television, computer, DVD-based multimedia, and in live nightclub settings.〔"Barrymore's Video Kid, Jeff Green, Is Dusting Off Some Unusual Footage". ''The Ottawa Citizen'', May 18, 1983 — about an Elvis Presley video presentation.〕 His work has earned him critical acclaim〔Crook, T. ''Radio Drama: Theory and Practice''. London: Routledge, 1999. ISBN 0-415-21603-6〕〔"CHEZ Radio Play a Sci-Fi Romp". ''The Ottawa Citizen'', January 18, 1986, p. C16 — about the first airing of ''Spaxter''.〕 and a number of awards. In addition to the work he has created, he was instrumental in the evolution of broadcast radio in the Ottawa market during the late 1970s and the 1980s — specifically, the Carleton University non-profit radio station CKCU-FM〔"Radio Carleton Ready to Roll". ''The Ottawa Journal'', November 13, 1975, p.33 — features a large photo of Jeff Green at production controls, wearing torn shirt and jeans, Sennheiser headphones held together with duct tape, and with WWII-era military anti-snowblindness slit goggles on his forehead.〕 and the commercial album-oriented rock radio station CHEZ-FM. Currently, he is working as a multimedia consultant and produces and hosts a bi-weekly overnight radio show on CKCU called ''Big In Japan''.
==Career==
Jeff Green began his career in radio in 1972 at Carleton University's CKCU-FM, when it was only running with a carrier current license — "broadcasting" by closed circuit to the university commons areas, and through a transmitter in the residence building to the students there. He was one of the founding Production Managers when CKCU received its FM radio license in 1975. In 1976, he became the founding Production Manager at the Ottawa album-oriented〔(Radio Station History: CHEZ-FM )〕 rock station CHEZ-FM. In 1980 he received a Canada Council Explorations grant to create the radio drama ''Epiphanies'', intended as a pilot for a series that was never produced. In addition to his work in radio, he was editor for the now-defunct tabloid entertainment paper Ottawa Revue from 1981 to 1983. From 1983 to 1985, he was Central and Eastern Canada’s first VJ, presenting groundbreaking video programming at Ottawa rock and roll venue Barrymore's before music video television was generally available in Canada (MTV had just launched and was only available by satellite television, which was relatively rare at the time). In Ottawa, from 1979 through 1983, Jeff Green designed and executed an annual series of popular〔"Ne'ewollaH Devotees Plan to Invade Barrymore's". ''The Ottawa Citizen'', October 29, 1982 — about the "Trontastic Luminous Ne'ewollah" event.〕 live club multimedia performances at Hallowe'en entitled "Ne'ewollah".〔The backwards name derives from his having held multimedia rich Hallowe'en parties in his long and narrow apartment in the late 1970s. To get sufficient image size from the video projectors, he aimed them down a hallway and bounced them off a mirror, hence all images were backwards. Source: email from Jeff Green.〕
In 1985 he began the series of radio dramas that became known as ''Soundings''. ''Soundings'' went on to win several awards, including a silver medal at the New York International Radio Festival. Originally aired on Ottawa’s CHEZ-FM, episodes of the series were eventually broadcast on the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, Australian Broadcasting Corporation, and National Public Radio (U.S.) networks, as well as London's LBC Radio station. The radio plays were featured on XM Satellite Radio’s former Sonic Theater channel.
In 1990, Green began an association with members of Ottawa’s Salt & Pepper Theatre Company which resulted in the four-season ''Cowboy Who?'' television series, an all-ages satire of children’s programming for which he was co-creator, co-writer, producer, director, engineer, and performer. The series was broadcast from 1991 to 1995 on Mid-Canada Television, and won the 1992 Canpro Award (Canadian Independent Television Producer’s Association) for Best Children’s Series.
In 1993, he teamed up with the Animatics Multimedia Corporation, which resulted in the award-winning video-based interactive multimedia productions ''Midnight Stranger'' and ''Mode'' on which he acted as co-creator, writer, and director. These dramas were notable for their innovative user interface and "point of view" social interaction, and were hailed as being some of the finest productions available in their genre.〔e.g. Blackwell, G., "Take a Virtual Walk on the Wild Side". ''The Toronto Star'', February 16, 1995.〕 Currently, he is working as a multimedia consultant and produces and hosts a bi-weekly overnight radio show on CKCU called ''Big In Japan''.

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