experience

Tim Chaisson and Morning Fold – Broken Hearted Beat EPK

Tim contacted me a while back about the possibility of doing this video for him. At the time, I had no idea what and EPK was, but jumped at the opportunity to work on what was sure to be an interesting project with a guy as talented and cool as Tim. He is, quite possibly, the nicest fella you’ll ever meet.

Original video on Vimeo.

I had a lot of fun working on this project. As mentioned, Tim is a great guy to work with, and was trusting enough to let me take over creatively. That said, he and the band were still on top of things with some great suggestions, most of which I was able to fit into the final piece.

The greatest challenge was fitting all of the concert footage over top of the song Tim had suggested we use. I think I managed to line it up not too bad, but with the band obviously playing different songs, instruments, and tempos throughout the footage, it wasn’t always easy.

The interviews and concert footage was shot with a Sony EX 1, and the footage from the recording sessions were shot by Tim himself on his MacBook’s iSight camera. I think the combination of the HD clips and the iSight material is really interesting.

You can check out Tim’s website at timchaisson.com.

Nine videos in two weeks.

(Note: This post was originally written for my work blog, Jumpcut… just so you know.)

While the Canada Games were at UPEI, I, along with my trusty sidekick and host Fraser McCallum, produced a series of web videos around the Canada Games. We managed to knock out nine videos in about two weeks. Impressive, if I do say so myself. During the process, I learned quite a few things about throwing together a short-run web series.

In no particular order:

Get a host

Getting a host was probably the best thing we did for this series. While I’ve worked with “hosts” in the past on a video-by-video basis, never before has one person been the face of nine. The host acts as a familiar face, and makes the editing process much, much simpler. Rather than trying to tell the story with only images and sporadic interviews, the host can tell the entire story in a matter of seconds. Plus, if you get a fella like Fraser, he can help with the production.

Schedule the episodes, but leave it flexible

Before we started, we knew we wanted to create a collection of vignettes, but also knew that we wanted to have the flexibility to create some “news” content. In other words, if one of our students were to win a medal, we wanted to make sure we could add that piece into our production schedule. It worked.

Know when to stop cutting and post

I love to edit, and if it were feasible, I’d take a week to edit a three minute video. But when you’re trying to do one video a day, that’s obviously not possible. When the video had to get up, it had to get up. As such, I had to sacrifice some of my pickier post-production tendencies.

One in the can is worth two in the bush

This depends on how time dependent your content is. If your content is “this is what happened today, and tomorrow you won’t care about it,” then maybe this statement is not true. However, if you plan on people watching this episodic content weeks or months down the road, then deciding to put the extra effort in one video and dropping another is definitely worth the consideration.

Less (footage) is more

This took a while for me to learn, but when I did, it made everything so much faster. Keep in mind that every frame you shoot will have to be logged, captured, and considered for editing. This process, as you likely know, takes a lot longer than you think it should. Thus, if you’ve three shots of athletes jumping hurdles, you probably don’t need a fourth.

Post to YouTube while you’re still waiting for approval

Like all good editors, I had to make sure that someone looked over the “completed” videos before we let them free to the world. Sometimes, this approval process took hours. Perhaps the approver(s) didn’t have time to see it right then and there, or perhaps I was out shooting when it did. Most times, my first edit was the one that was going to go live, so while I was waiting for approval, I posted to YouTube and set the the privacy setting to “Private.” That way, when approval came through, I simply had to change that permission, and the video could be live right away. If changes needed to be made, I could just delete that uploaded video and throw up the new one.

The Sony EX 1 is heavy

I love this camera, and trying to produce this series on tape would have been a major pain in the neck. The tripod we had it on was about two times as heavy as the camera. It didn’t really slow us down, but it sure helped in tiring us out.

So that’s it. Sure, some of it may be common sense, but I hope it at least reinforces the points. If anyone has other tips for this kind of production, I’d love to hear about it.

Being sideways can sometimes help…

Nine times out of ten, the videos I create for The University of Prince Edward Island’s website end up living in the main content area of a page, and thus, are usually 400 or 480 pixels wide. Whether I’m shooting in 4:3 or 16:9 (usually 16:9), the videos themselves end up being a fairly good size.

However, every now and then the best place for a video is in the sidebar of a webpage. Cramming a 16:9 video into a 200px wide sidebar often leaves the video pretty squished, if not unwatchable.

I was presented with this challenge recently when I was charged with shooting several testimonial videos of a few of our international students. We need to fit these videos into the sidebars of a several pages, and I knew squishing a 16:9 video in there was going to be pointless. 

So that’s when I thought: who says a web video has to be landscape?

Instead of shooting the videos the old fashioned way, I flipped the camera on its side and shot them at a 90° angle. I’ll rotate the clips in post, and then the videos will fit in the sidebar as neat little portrait testimonials.

portraitvideo

Now, the videos can be large enough to be watchable, and the shape of the frame is perfect for framing an interview.

Sure, I could have shot the videos the with the camera straight on and then just cropped the frame to a more reasonable size, but I liked looking in the viewfinder and knowing how it was going to look when it was done. Plus, shooting at 90° means that you’re getting the highest possible resolution (which isn’t that necessary when shooting in HDV for the web, but certainly can’t hurt).

The videos aren’t live yet, but I’ll be sure to update this post when they are.