On the Spot (Hungarian TV series)


On The Spot is a documentary TV series created by directors Eszter Cseke and Andras S. Takacs in their native Hungary. Each season has a central theme, using a fly on the wall style of documentary filmmaking. It premiered November 7, 2009, on :hu:Spektrum |Spektrum TV. It currently airs on Hungarian public television channels Duna and Duna World. Many of On the Spot's films are also shown across several European countries on special interest channels such as Spiegel TV and Sport 1, as well as Germany's international broadcaster Deutsche Welle.
The series takes its inspiration from famed Hungarian war correspondent Robert Capa who wrote, “If your pictures aren't good enough, you're not close enough.”

Synopsis

With just two small broadcast cameras and no extra crew, Cseke and Takacs pull triple duties as directors, producers and cinematographers. In doing so, they gain unique perspectives into the lives of people across the world in the most delicate environments. Each season is unique and focuses on a specific topic, whether it is living with ethnic tribes in Africa and Papua, being embedded with fighters in the Middle East or spending time with Fidel Castro's daughter Alina or Idi Amin's son Jaffar for their coverage about children of dictators.

Starting out

After graduating from the in Budapest, Cseke and Takacs put together their meager savings and went to Gaza with just a small camera and the drive to make an upstart documentary TV series. Three months later they were pitching the pilot episode to major TV channels in Hungary but no one thought it was commercial enough. Their gamble finally paid off when Spektrum TV - a small Central European cable channel searching for its first original programming - picked up the series and commissioned the first season.

Production

On The Spot's first three seasons were characterised by human interest stories around the world. Cseke and Takacs filmed in the ghettos of Johannesburg, searching out human rights activists in Kabul and found underground bloggers in Tehran. They interviewed UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon in the Arctic Circle and were interviewed live on the BBC about their . Years later they followed up their award-winning coverage on Burma by interviewing Aung San Suu Kyi about .
At the end of 2011, On The Spot transitioned from Spektrum TV to Hungarian public television channels Duna and Duna World. The series' topics went on to include ethnic tribes in Africa, power struggles in places like Tibet, India and the West Bank, and most recently around the globe.
Cseke and Takacs are also frequent contributors to Marie Claire and Forbes, using their travels and experiences as a backdrop for their articles.

Reception

The series has garnered a great deal of international recognition and critical acclaim. It at the 53rd Monte Carlo TV Festival, the Press Freedom Award in Strasbourg from the Council of Europe, the Prize for Best International Short Film at the and the Gold Plaque at the 50th .
The Financial Times wrote On The Spot is “up-close and visceral”, adding that “Takacs and Cseke plunge their cameras into the heart of the action, asking questions that are normally suppressed." BBC News called their different approach "rare and exclusive." In 2016, Takacs was included in Forbes’ '30 Under 30' list as one of the leading young entrepreneurs in European media.