On “All In America,” we’ve traveled to more than a dozen states this summer to bring you the stories you won’t see anywhere else. But one in particular — the Oct. 9th package on alternative energy — was born out of a road trip unlike any other.
Our mission: Follow a wind turbine blade from factory to farm, across the North/South Dakota border. To be clear, a single blade is a mammoth piece of fiberglass and wood, weighing in at nine tons and measuring half the length of a football field. To see one barreling down the highway is stunning. As Dave Devries, the crew leader for the wind turbine drivers, put it: “I’ve had a lot of people ask me what this thing is, and the best response I came up with was, it’s a prosthetic limb for a whale.”
After months of planning, two “All In” producers tackled the challenge over the course of one 17-hour day in early September. Armed with two video cameras, four Go-Pros, ten hours worth of blank tape, every assortment of wired, wireless, and stick mics, and more extension cords and extra batteries than we could count, we pulled out of our hotel in Grand Forks, North Dakota and drove to LM Wind Power, a factory that employs around 600 people and churns out five to six blades every day.
To interview Keith Longtin, General Manager of Wind Products for GE Renewable Energy, we jacked up one of the nearby pieces of equipment to get an amazing aerial view of the lined-up turbines in the background.
While we did our interviews at LM, we recorded an hour-long tape off our second camera in the factory while workers sanded and painted the newest blades.
It's no 60 ft Genie, but I'm pretty proud of this shot we just rigged up: pic.twitter.com/u4fzydUUvK
— Erin Delmore (@erindelmore) September 3, 2014
#AllInAmerica #inners pic.twitter.com/3RUGCJQZ9x
— Erin Delmore (@erindelmore) September 3, 2014
Back home in the edit booth, we sped up that tape to produce the time lapse you see in the package.
With some careful footing, we filmed the 180 foot blade being moved from the inside of the factory to the back of the truck.
Some blades travel thousands of miles to their destinations. Ours was headed just 255 miles away, to a brand new wind farm in Clark, South Dakota.
Each blade is massive — big enough for a person to crawl inside.
Coming soon… #AllInAmerica #inners pic.twitter.com/am6wHg8DNF
— All In w/Chris Hayes (@allinwithchris) September 3, 2014
#AllInAmerica #inners pic.twitter.com/mGYgbyEhno
— All In w/Chris Hayes (@allinwithchris) September 3, 2014
LM expects to produce 1,800 blades this year alone.
#AllInAmerica – wind turbines in North Dakota #inners pic.twitter.com/2Y3jfCldOz
— Erin Delmore (@erindelmore) September 4, 2014
We attached four GoPros to the turbine caravan: One on our car, one on the “pilot” car that drives behind the turbine with flashing lights, and two to the truck.








