Elle, your sister's a brave soul. A very long time ago (just out of college) I worked for a small fly-by-night TV station. Sold ads, cut commercials, took out the trash and yes, read news when the equipment was working. Commercial grade camcorders were just coming out back then, most stations were still shooting/processing film for out-of-studio coverage. This station did neither, I basically sat on a stool and behind a fake desk and read wire copy. The station mgr. had always wanted to do remote segments in news like the big stations, sooooo one day during an ice storm they came up with the idea that I would start out reading news, they would cut to a commercial (on our one working 2" video tape machine) and I would put on a coat and run out the back door of the studio so the camera could shoot me standing in the sleet from the doorway. No wireless stuff in those days so we were both literally at the very end of our cords. Then during the next commercial I ran back inside took off the coat and sat down behind the desk to read more wire copy with my hair still dripping. It turned out that I was also either on-camera or doing the voice-over in both commercials so it came off looking really hokey. I believe that was the station's one and only "remote coverage news story".
Other "oh s***" moments included sitting down to read news and discovering the wire copy was just alphabet soup (machine had been broken all day), having to pad 4 minutes of live TV due the VCR with the commercials breaking down, a light stand falling inches from my head "live and on camera" and the station getting flooded. Was almost a blessing when the station went belly-up. While I didn't turn out to be the next Dan Rather, the experience making changes on-the-fly, working with no help or resources, and with little or no budget helped prepare me for my later career in HR.