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Locations in filming, whether it's television or movies, are an essential part when shooting outside the studio. Many productions are no longer made in the setting of a Hollywood studio. Take Dawson's Creek. That show was filmed in the Carolinas, not a California studio.

All this location shooting is good news for location managers. They are the professionals who recommend locations to the producer and director. They usually review the script before suggesting places to film.

There are really two people who do this. One is the location scout. The other is the location manager. A location scout takes thousands of pictures of one location that film crews can select from. After the location is chosen, scouts are usually not involved in the production.

The location manager manages the location. He is usually responsible for being the liaison between the owners of the property and the crew.

Timothy Stone, a location manager, says the job is really at the hub of production. "Everyone comes to locations when they need something."

The main job of location managers is basically keeping everyone happy. That's sometimes an impossible task. Location managers also secure the permits and paperwork necessary for shooting.

Stone says he breaks down the script and analyzes the creative needs of the director. In the beginning, location managers also work very closely with the production designer, who knows which scenes will be shot on location and which will be shot in a studio.

Once the location manager has found the locations (which can include finding housing and offices for the crew), he must begin negotiations with the owners. "Legal, business and personal correspondence takes place every day," says Stone.

The location manager may also be responsible for hiring a local crew, says Ashley Hathaway, a location manager. Hathaway had to do that for a job in Arizona.

As the time for shooting comes closer, every department comes to the location manager for details. They want to know everything from where to park their car to how to get to the location.

"The details of the shoot will overwhelm many first-time location managers," Stone says. Wrap (when the shoot is over in a certain location) is just as detailed, says Stone. "The location manager must return the locations to all parties as found, or many times better."

To make matters more difficult, a location manager works with new people on each shoot, usually in an unfamiliar location. Still, you have to pretend you know everything, says Hathaway.

"I cannot stress enough the need for a strong grasp of logistics," says Stone. This means that you must be able to move a crew of 250 men and women with 3,000 feet of trucks and equipment.

"Finding a place to put all of it can be a display of masterful logistic management. And sometimes it is done every day while shooting, moving from location to location," says Stone.

Many location managers just fall into their jobs while working on movie sets. The directors they work with see that they are effective as location managers.

Hathaway received her communications degree and then worked on sets as production manager, associate producer and coordinating producer. Stone went for his business degree and then took the production assistant route.

If you're interested in becoming a location manager, become familiar with all locations in your area. This will be a big asset to you.

Stone says one of his pet peeves is when people think the job is glamorous. It is work. "Real work," he says. Location managers do get to hang out with the stars. But stars are co-workers, just like in any other office environment. They can make you angry when they are inconsiderate.

"Like every job, there are better days and worse days. But the glamour is not overflowing. I don't watch shows like E! Entertainment News or Entertainment Tonight because that image of Hollywood is sorely distorted. Swimming pools and movie stars it is not," says Stone.

Deannie Sullivan-Fraser has been a freelance location manager for eight years. "I do commercials or do some film and some videos. Corporate [videos] and commercials are the mainstays of what I do."

Chances are you've seen the results of her work. "I've done local, regional and a couple of national commercials. And there was one international one for Peugot."

Location management was a natural choice for Sullivan-Fraser. "Previous to coming here, I had my own production company -- communications. So when we did videos or multimedia productions, I wore a lot of hats. So that's when I started doing it."

Sullivan-Fraser says the field isn't as simple as picking a pretty spot to film a production. "The more training you can get, the better, because you don't want to go in there and flounder for either yourself or the production -- because productions spend a lot of money."

Part of the stress comes from the importance of the work. "As a location manager, you do a lot of stuff up front, finding the location for the production to happen. And that has to be done with the director, so you really have to know what you're doing."

Sullivan-Fraser says it's not as hard as you might think to get that experience. "You can get entry-level positions. In a bigger milieu like a movie, where there's a variety of levels from location manager to location assistant -- that's a good place to get into."

She also advises starting small. "Let's says someone is doing an art movie -- that's another good place to get in. People who have a love project going and really can't afford to do a lot. I'll drop my rates to work with someone like that."

In short, taking a lower wage to get the experience is a good way to get yourself to the ultimate location for people in this field -- the film set.