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grassroots video

Page history last edited by mminions 1 yr ago

Grassroots Video - 2008 Horizon Report

 

"our notions of what constitutes useful or engaging video have been redefined – and more and more, it is a two to three minute piece designed for viewing in a three-inch browser window or on a mobile phone”

 

“easy for amateurs to get good results without investing in expensive equipment, software, or training”

 

“the effect of all these developments is that the capacity for video production has been distributed to the grassroots level”

 

More options than ever before to incorporate video into the curricula

Student produced clips

Faculty produced clips


Abbreviated history of motion picture production

 

Chemical film stock

Recording camera / projection camera

Editing process – cutting film

Making physical copies for distribution to theatres

 

Television – non-physical distribution system

Recording involved film camera pointed at the screen

 

Videotape

Magnetic recording/editing

Physical duplication in real time

 

Portable video – _”Umatic, VHS, 8mm

VCR to VCR editing

Usually VHS distribution

 

Digital video recording on tape

miniDV, Hi8, DVD

non-linear computer-based editing

postage-stamp online video

distribution on DVD

 

tapeless digital video

HDD, memory card

Computer-based editing

Online distribution


Production process overview

From The Director in the Classroom – Nikos Theodosakis

 

Development    Idea

Pre-Production    Plan

Production    Action

Post-Production    Edit

Distribution    Show   


Over the last 100 years:

equipment costs have gone way down (hardware & software)

duplication & distribution costs have gone way down (virtual distribution)

training requirements for production and post-production have gone down a little

- people are still expensive, but there are more of them available

- hardware & software is easier to learn – mostly due to ease of access

Development & pre-production planning costs have stayed about the same

- pre-prod may have declined a bit because of more flexible equipment and computer-generated effects

- word processing, e-mail & online collaboration tools make it easier

 

consequence: stuff gets made that, in the past, never would have gotten past the development stage

- comparison: desktop publishing revolution produced a lot of unreadable newsletters.

 

Theory: When equipment was expensive and complex and took a long time to learn, people had time to develop aesthetic judgment along the way. Now we don’t.


Production process in action

 

Come up with an interesting idea

Determine the distribution format (audience)

Find an editing process that will give you that distribution format (online, DVD, ???)

Find a shooting process that will feed your editing process (format)

Plan the shoot

Shoot

Edit

Distribute


Production Gear

 

Camera

Tripod

Audio (microphones, headphones, mixers)

Lighting

Other kinds of content:

Still images (photos, full screen or superimposed graphics)

Animated still images

Computer screen capture

Audio recordings (live and pre-recorded)

Special effects (green screen, compositing)


Camera formats

Tape-based (DV, miniDV, DVCPRO, DVCAM, Betacam, HDV …)

Disc-based (DVD …)

Memory-based (internal HDD, external HDD, flash card, P2 …)

Analog conversion to digital (firewire converter, D8 or miniDV camera)

Other possibilities:

Digital still cameras often have movie capability

Webcams can usually record direct to the computer (direct to youtube?)

Time-lapse with digital still camera

Stop-frame animation with digital still camera

Computer screen capture


Tripods & variations

Stability vs. weight

Removable mounting plate

Fluid head


Audio

Getting good sound – see DJTV audio tutorial - http://www.digitaljuice.com/djtv/

On camera mic

External handheld mic (adapters for mic input on camera)

External lav mic

External shotgun mic

boom pole

mixer to combine multiple sources


Lighting

3 point (portrait lighting) – see DJTV 3point lighting tutorial - http://www.digitaljuice.com/djtv/

Using available light

Reflectors

Found light sources

Qualities of light

Direction

Intensity

Colour

Texture


Shooting techniques

Why is there a zoom rocker?

Still vs moving camera (consequences for compression)

Shot vocabulary: wide, medium, tight, close-up, long shot, establishing shot

Sequence of shots – see DJTV punctuation tutorial

Change angle, framing between shots of same person

Have subject move in or out of shot

Do not cross the axis of action

Compressing time with a sequence of shots


Post-production

Get content into edit software

Capture in real time from tape or drag files

Gather other materials (stills, titles, audio, music)

Simple assembly on a single video track (movie maker, imovie)

Multi-layer capability (FCP, premiere, vegas, avid)

Online editing tools (editing can mean a lot of different things)

Complexities:

DVD footage – frames must be recreated to edit

AVCHD – sometimes captured in intermediate codec


Distribution

DVD burning software

Computer-based video format

Online video format (youtube specs) – see DJTV encode4youtube tutorial - http://www.digitaljuice.com/djtv/


Projects:

The rant

How-to video

Abstract animation

The remix


Examples:

http://techtv.mit.edu/ - provides free video hosting to mit community using blip.tv

http://www.youtube.com/ucberkeley - UC Berkeley’s youtube channel

http://au.youtube.com/user/unsw - Sydney

http://www.jove.com/ - journal of visualized experiments

http://www.video24-7.org/ USC School of Cinematic Arts – Institute for Multimedia Literacy – the future of internet video


Free resources:

http://www.archive.org

- extensive collection of moving images & audio

http://cogdogroo.wikispaces.com/StoryMedia - links to content

http://cogdogroo.wikispaces.com/StoryTools - 39 - 46 are video tools

 


Editing & processing tools:

http://www.fixmymovie.com

- designed for cell phone, webcam and low res digital camera footage

- sharpens image quality

- max size 15MB, max resolution 352x288

http://eyespot.com/ - upload, remix

http://www.jumpcut.com/ - upload, grab public clips, edit

http://www.veotag.com/ - annotate specific parts of video or audio

http://www.labnol.org/internet/video/best-youtube-video-tools/2104/ -companion tools for online video

http://mashable.com/2007/06/27/video-toolbox/ - more resources than you could ever look at in one lifetime


Distribution sites:

http://www.youtube.com/

- prefers: mpeg4 480x360 or higher, under 100MB – max 10 minutes

- Uploader option allows up to 1GB

http://video.google.com/

- mpeg4 or mpeg2, 640x480 30fps 4:3, de-interlace

- they output 320x240 flash in 4:3 (will letterbox if necessary)

http://www.viddler.com/

- 500MB limit per video

http://blip.tv

- prefer quicktime or wmv, recommend under 100MB

- option to show original upload format (not flash recompress)

http://ourmedia.org

- uses SpinXpress to upload – files stored at archive.org

http://www.metacafe.com/

http://www.revver.com/  - ad revenue split with producer

http://www.masternewmedia.org/news/2006/11/25/video_publishing_online_where_to.htm - review of video publishing sites


live streaming – your own tv station

http://www.ustream.tv/

http://www.mogulus.com/ - live and pre-recorded clips

http://www.stickam.com/

http://www.justin.tv/    

 


Online tutorials

http://www.digitaljuice.com/djtv/

- audio, lighting, camerawork, compression (techknow & take5 series)

http://blip.tv - Learning Center has excellent overview of web video storytelling

http://www.lynda.com/

http://makeinternettv.org/

http://www.ojr.org/ojr/wiki/video/ - Annenberg School for Communication at USC

http://ourmedia.org/learning-center


Ongoing discussion

http://horizon.nmc.org/wiki/Grassroots_Video_Questions - the 2008 horizon report wiki on grassroots video

http://www.pbs.org/teachers/learning.now/2007/09/youtube_101_yes_its_a_real_cla_1.html - teaching through youtube

http://mediatedcultures.net/ksudigg/?p=127 How to create a youtube mashup by M. Wesch

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