Friday, July 11, 2008

Class #3 Summer 08: Digital Production, Mace Camhe

Big thanks to Mace Camhe, Founder and Head of Production from The Outfit Media Group (www.theoutfitmg.com). We all benefited greatly form his first-hand experience, which he so generously shared. Mace discussed his job of wrangling talent and educating clients while managing schedules and budgets to get projects to completion. Mace was excited about how the RED ( www.red.com ) is actually transforming acquisition and how is shop is currently hot on the Panasonic HD P2 Format for its speed of no-tape workflow. He enlightened me about how Oakley makes its own “glass” and that it is of superior quality. We discussed “workflow” in the contact of production and post and how Mace keeps a Post Supervisor on staff to Sheppard the process through. Production budgets are being constantly squeezed while quality is still going up due to an evolving talent pool and excellent tools. Speed of production and post is what he says “fills in the holes” and continues to “push the envelope”. Mace talked about how his company becomes part of team that serves clients along with PR companies and advertising agencies. We discussed what makes video viral and how this is more of the future. Mace was good enough to share with us the newly minted teaser for the “Follow-Series” on Kira Plastinina, teenage fashion mogul. Thanks again Mace!

NEWS
Shannon pointed out the NYT article on the success of the latest WHERE THE HELL IS MATT, AKA “DANCING MATT” viral video accruing over 20 million views on You tube and Stride gum as a sponsor. It sparked our discussion on what makes something viral. It was reported in Wired.com that Mark Cuban’s HD NET is going to release movies on HD TV ahead of theatrical turning the traditional “Windowing” upside down. Cuban believes that this will not cannibalize a theatrical release. Nielsen has come out with its “3 Screen” product measuring consumer consumption of content across mobile, PC and TV. Someone else reported that digital cable seems to be getting better uptake than Direct Broadcast Satellite TV. Is it pricing? Quality? Content? Services? User experience? I brought up the FISA law amendment and was informed that it passed the Senate making it Law that the tacos have immunity and could not be prosecuted for complying with the government in granting access to customer’s electronic communications. Any guarantee to your right to electronic privacy has been revoked.

CLASS: Digital Production and Distribution
The Slides for this class can be viewed at this link (I added some additional detail)
We covered digital acquisition, post-production including Digital Intermediate, and digital theatrical distribution with electronic projection. There are a many HD Formats to choose from Prosumer camcorders such as the Cannon VIXIA to the high-end Electronic New Gathering (ENG) and Field Production cameras like the SONY XD Cam and Panasonic P2. The XD Cam uses optical media and the P2 records onto a flash RAM card. No transferring form tape! The higher end digital Cinema cameras include the F900, CineAlta, Viper, and the revolutionary RED. I spoke with an experienced Gaffer, Jimmy Scott who confirmed that the image quality from the RED can be as good as most 35mm shoots and in some cases can reveal even more detail because there is no grain. RED’s latest product will be a 5K-resolution camera.

Digital Intermediate is the process by which all the finishing steps of a film are done digitally. Any filmed elements are scanned and digitized. The final master is indeed digital and can be output to film via a film recorder or encoded into a Digital Cinema Package (DCP) for digital projection. The two competing digital projector manufacturers are Christie Digital and Sony. Sony has the XRD 4K model, which project mind-blowing images up to IMAX size.

3D using the REAL D or 3ALITY system is rolling out. The 10 July LA TIMES ( In 3D! Oh wait... The studios may be ready, but many theaters still aren't) reported that it is now in only 800 of the 35,000 US screens but is viewed as the antidote for flagging feature film attendance, which has dropped over 12% since 2002. Revenues have kept up due to rising ticket prices. The article goes on to herald the forthcoming increase in digital 3D releases.

Electronic Projection also enables exhibitors to show pre-show ads and special events such as the Metropolitan Opera. In the near future digital cinema 3D concerts and sports events will become common.

We also discussed that “Windows” for movie distribution are changing. Mark Cuban announced that he would release some movie on his HD NET TV Network before, or at the same time as in theaters.
Big thanks to Mace Camhe, Founder and Head of Production from The Outfit Media Group (www.theoutfitmg.com). We all benefited greatly form his first-hand experience which he so generously shared. Mace discussed his job of wrangling talent and educating clients while managing schedules and budgets to get projects to completion. Mace was excited about how the RED ( www.red.com ) is actually transforming acquisition and how is shop is currently hot on the Panasonic HD P2 Format for its speed of no-tape workflow. He enlightened me about how Oakley makes its own “glass” and that it is of superior quality. We discussed “workflow” in the contact of production and post and how Mace keeps a Post Supervisor on staff to shepard the process through. Production budgets are being constantly squeezed while quality is still going up due to an evolving talent pool and excellent tools. Speed of production and post is what he says “fills in the holes” and continues to “push the envelope”. Mace talked about how his company becomes part of team that serves clients along with PR companies and advertising agencies. We discussed what makes video viral and how this is more of the future. Mace was good enough to share with us the newly minted teaser for the “Follow-Series” on Kira Plastinina, teenage fashion mogul. Thanks again Mace! Sphere: Related Content

13 comments:

Gdilla said...

Here are the numbers from the article I brought in on "3-Screen" viewership:

- Americans are watching more TV (127HRs/person in May, up from 121 in May 07)

- Americans spent 26HRs/person online in May (compared to 24HRs last year)

- In total, 282 million americans look at a TV screen at least once in any given month, compared to 162 million who go online at least once per month. Of those 162m, 119m watched online video in May (at least once)

- Online video viewing: 2HRs19mins per person [Put another way, for every 1 hour of online video, Americans watch 57 hours of TV]

- Out of 217 million mobile phone users in this country, 4.4m subscribe to mobile video, and the avg user watches 3HRs15min. That's a 2% participation rate. Limitations include old phones, service availability (and higher cost monthly plans).

These numbers come from Nielsen's new "Three Screen" reports

Why is this important? - For setting ad rates on different mediums

What's missing in this data? Nielsen can't track individual usage, for example, we can't measure people who watch x amount of TV and x amount of internet video. Nielsen is working on this. This data is important to draw correlation between the three-screens. The goal is to see if cannibalization is occurring, or complimentary phenomena if any.


Other interesting data:

Children 2-11 spend 1/3 of their time on the web watching video. Think of the appetite for bandwidth these little ones will have when they grow up!

Link to original article:
http://tvdecoder.blogs.nytimes.com/2008/07/08/americans-are-watching-more-tv-than-ever-nielsen-reports/

Pulled from NYT's TV decoder blog:
http://tvdecoder.blogs.nytimes.com/

Gdilla said...

Belkin Introduced Wireless HDMI

There were working demos at CES from a number of startups however. So more solutions can be expected soon. But to my knowledge, Belkin is the first to take orders for such a system. Disclosure - I work on a design team that designs and sells chips into this market(not to Belkin, however). I'm not saying you should buy wireless HDMI (yet). It's too expensive now.

Summary:

- Cost is $1000 if you want HD signals to go through walls
- They have a *cheaper* $700 version for single room transmission
(because of a cheaper chip set, I presume)
- Transmits in the 5GHz band (above microwave range, thankfully, so
your pets and your brains don't fry)
- The transmitters have 3inputs, so you can have your blu-ray DVD (and
one other source) beamed anywhere in the house as well in full
1080i/p;
- Stylish people will care because it cuts out unsightly and expensive
cabling and installations;
- cons: expensive, and for those of use who tweak our TVs and per
input (one setting for SD signals, HD DVDs and cable box), we would
now have to tweak manually everytime because the wireless receiver
goes into one TV input. a minor annoyance.

Nerdy technical note: You can't watch wireless HD on two TVs at the
same time without a signal repeaters and two of these Belkin bad boys,
so that's kind of a drawback. I

Belkin presser:

http://www.belkin.com/pressroom/releases/uploads/07_10_08FlyWire.html

Gautam

Darryl said...

Sounds like I missed a great class and guest speaker.

I reviewed Mace’s website and was very impressed. I’ve bookmarked it for future reference.

I was also surprised to see HDMI mentioned this week. I found out about HDMI (HIGH DEFINITION MULTIMEDIA INTERFACE) this week when I went to Costco to continue my mystery shopping. The associated, Eric, explained to me that I should look for HDMI noted on LCD and Plasma HDTVs box to make sure the TV has interface capability with my computer. Much to my surprise, some Plasma HDTVs do have computer interface, which now is going to make my decision even harder.

I’ll add my summary of an news article soon for this week.

Take care, Darryl

Unknown said...

Really informative class... Thanks Mace. Hey Stuart... you haven't responded to my emails, so I don't think you're getting them... could you send me one and I'll reply? sspignese@yahoo.com Thx.

Unknowndskfjhb said...

Hellooo! I've also had no response to an important assignment related email. Could you kindly email me at dominiquecristall@gmail.com?
Thank you so much and see you Wednesday.

Unknown said...

PS3 Video On Demand Starts
TONIGHT!

BuKoolee said...

After the class talked about digital 2k and 4k projections, I decided to check out Journey to the center of the earth. From a Technological viewpoint, it was amazing. The last 3-D movie I saw was Captain Eo so I was very impressed with how far along 3-D technology has evolved. I wouldn't recommend the movie in regular 2-d however, as the movie by itself is quite painful to watch.

Gdilla said...

Radiohead Makes a Video without using Lights OR a camera.

http://code.google.com/creative/radiohead/

Anonymous said...

that Radiohead video and making of is amazing!

Gdilla said...

News items:

YouTube content comes to TiVo:
http://www.techcrunch.com/2008/07/17/youtube-coming-to-a-tivo-near-you/

And Amazon debuts streaming Movie/TV today:
http://www.techcrunch.com/2008/07/17/amazon-to-debut-streaming-movietv-service-today/

Unknowndskfjhb said...

Here is the link to the article I mentioned in class:
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/07/16/dining/16note.html?_r=1&scp=2&sq=iphone%20urbanspoon&st=cse&oref=slogin

Unknown said...

Not sure if something is public domain or not...check this out

Darryl said...

I read a short article on HDTV News website (http://www.hdtv-news.co.uk/2008/07/11/abi-predicts-1-million-wireless-hdtvs-by-2012/), which cites ABI’s expectation of wireless installations for HDTV to grow to 1 million by 2012 with growth in both the home entertainment and commercial market. ABI also presents for consideration, which wireless technology, will prevail with the greatest market share. The wireless technologies are 5 GHz, 60 GHz, and ultra wideband (UWB). The 5 GHz technology prevails now for its proven track record, but the 60 GHz offers high data rates while the UWB offers enhanced bandwidth for shorter distances. Again, we have the technology dilemma of size vs. speed vs. what’s common now.

ABI expects one of these technologies to take a clear lead over the next two or three years. I think the leader will be UWB. I’m okay with data/information in small amounts, but I cannot accept slow speeds. Of course, this is my opinion. I want to see my pictures/videos fast. I think their projection of 1 million wireless installations by 2012 is low compared to the amount of homes in the USA that will be moving to HDTV by 2009.