Thursday, May 30, 2013

Reading #3
 
One of my favorite things Bob Dotson wrote was the part about "how to become a story teller."
 
specifically the part about his photojournalist friend. He didn't have the confidence to write stories because he didn't think he could come up with anything clever-but in all actuality he is the one who inspired Bobs First words in the article. If he would have thought of what he was saying and stress it a little less he would have been able to write that article himself without the help of another journalist.
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Land of 10,000 stories: purr-fect music. March 30th 2011.
The dogs howling in the beginning. the women playing the harp. the grey cat purring loudly. The cars driving by the gas station. Cat meowing along with her harp at the end.
Tight shot on a cats eye. I thought it was really cool because you can see the cat looking at you. Depth shot: Rachel christiansan is seen through the harp strings so you can see her playing and still see her face. Depth shot of a sleeping cat with the Harpist out of focus in the background, you can see how relaxed the cats really get. wide shot of her in the whole room, lets you see how small the room is and how it needs to get bigger.
Harpist-serenades-animals
 
Pictures: this story had a lot of shots showing how extremely relaxed and happy the cats were. one shot that comes to mind is the picture of the Grey cat purring through the gate and going up to it when she got closer to it.
Voice overs: You could really tell how bitter some of the workers were about getting their money for the shelter gambled away. Women in the grey sweatshirt is especially angry and passionate.
Graphics: they used a design of the floor plan to show what the building was going to look like before they lost the money.


Wednesday, May 29, 2013

1.  What is a "Run and Gun" interview? When can we use a "Run and Gun" interview?
not formally planned. Met someone willing to give an interview. 1 or two questions.
2.  What is the first thing you should do BEFORE starting off for the interview?
test equipment!!!! most important.
3.  Why do you think we should ask for permission?
to be polite. and to make sure they are willing.
4.  Why should we always ask the interviewee to state and spell their names?
for the lower thirds.
5.  Where should we place the microphone?
thumb-pinky rule. Don't give it to them.
6.  Should we hand the mic to the interviewee?
NEVER
7.  The photographer is responsible for the sound levels.  What are two things the photog should be aware of? Making sure the sound meters are at the proper level. Background noise.

8.  COMPOSITION:  How we should frame our interview shot:
a.  Eyes on Third
b.  2 Eyes One ear c. 
Camera should be Higher, Even, or Lower than subject? Even
d.  Talking space or Nose Room


BACKGROUNDS:
9. Avoid shooting in front of  a window.

10.  Why should we keep signs out of the background?
they are distracting to viewers
11.  If we were doing an interview about the high cost of parking at EVHS where would a good place to interview be? the window looking down at the parking lot

12.  What is a demonstration interview and what are the benefits?
the interviewee shows the interviewer how to do something or demonstrates a tallent.


It’s Too for coffee
*Soundbite 1: You know during the summer months uhh we ice most of our drinks a lot of our customers  still need their caffeine fix so you know if they usually get a latte they will get an ice latte instead.
Soundbite 2: umm I think we come; I probably come in here 2 or 3 times a week. Usually, maybe less but max 3 times a week.
*Soundbite 3: uh well pretty typically I like a nice hot cup of coffee, but uh in the summer it’s really nice to just come in and get a cool drink
Soundbite 4: umm well I have got the iced mud puddle right here one of their classics it’s got umm vanilla and uhh lets see and mocha, a little bit of chocolate mixed in there and uhh mix it all up with some ice and it’s a good drink little whipped cream and it tops it right off.
*Soundbite 5: I umm read a lot of medical books and herb books and they say that coffee can actually cool you down, than drinking cold sodas and stuff it just takes your.. it does something to reduce the heat of your body. And it seems to do okay.
…………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………....
Stand ups
*Standup 1: everyone knows to come down town to the Mud House for a great cup of coffee but nobody wants coffee when its 105 degrees.
*Standup 2: for coffee shops like the mud house there is one way to beat the heat and that’s to offer refreshing cold drinks.
Stand up 3: another great thing about the Mud House is that once you get your drink and sit down there’s a lot of great artwork.
……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………..
B-roll
Man typing on laptop, wide shot.
Man typing different angle medium shot.
*(maybe)Wide shot of girls waiting in line.
Tight shot of the Mud House menu/sign.
*Tight shot on the word “HOT”.
Tight shot bag of coffee.
*Medium shot ceiling fan.
Worker putting creamer back on the shelf.
Worker making a drink and close up on “pick up drinks here” sign.
Worker filling a coffee mug close up.
Tight shot on “lift my lid” sign
Person lifting up toilet seat on the wall and showing painting underneath.
*Menu of frozen drinks tight shot.
*Another shot of frozen drink menu.
Employee doing some dishes-mediumish shot.
Shot of shaky camera on tables and then another toilet seat art.
Shot of green lady wall art.
Another toilet seat art shot.  Zooms into a painting of a sad dog face
*Women drinking a cold drink with whip cream on top.
Shaky shot of two women drinking their iced coffee. Zoom in on 2nd women’s drink
Long tight shot of coffee process, puts the handle looking thing on the machine. Puts ingredients in blender.  Gets ice for whatever she is making. Blending it with ice.
*Tight shot on “end of program-ready” on the blender. Employee takes it shakes it, then puts it back on for a few more seconds, then pours it out into a cup. and tops it off with some whip cream. Adds lid and a straw.
“the double peanut butter bubble”? –employee calls out drink name and customer picks it up.


Script
*Standup 1: everyone knows to come down town to the Mud House for a great cup of coffee but nobody wants coffee when its 105 degrees.--- *Tight shot on the word “HOT”.
Soundbite 2: umm I think we come; I probably come in here 2 or 3 times a week. Usually, maybe less but max 3 times a week.
*Soundbite 5: I umm read a lot of medical books and herb books and they say that coffee can actually cool you down, than drinking cold sodas and stuff it just takes your.. it does something to reduce the heat of your body. And it seems to do okay.
*Soundbite 3: uh well pretty typically I like a nice hot cup of coffee, but uh in the summer it’s really nice to just come in and get a cool drink *my bad i could not find the complete script I wrote*

Thursday, May 16, 2013


The art of violin bow making
2:28

1.       Tight shot of craftsman tying apron.

2.       Tight shot of craftsman rolling up sleeves.

3.       Medium shot of his face. Holding an unfinished bow.

4.       Tight shot of him scraping the bow.

5.       Tight shot of his face while he is scraping.

6.       Tight shot of face during interview.

7.       Angled medium shot of him flexing the unfinished bow.

8.       Tight shot of him knocking the bow with his finger.

9.       Medium angled shot of him looking down the bow.

10.   Shot of him scraping the bow going straight towards the camera.

11.   Same shot but from a side angle and more out of perspective.

12.   Tight shot of him screwing in the bottom tightening pin.

13.   Tight shot of him moving his hand down the bow towards the base.

14.   Tight shot of him pulling the strings horizontally.

15.   Pan shot from his lights down to his work table.

16.   Medium shot of a table with a protractor looking thing on it.

17.   Slow pan in on hammer, file, and knife looking object.

18.   Tight depth shot of a pile of different bows he has made.

19.   Depth shot of unfinished bow with wood shavings in front.

20.   Tight shot of wood used to make bows

21.   Fade into different angle of previous shot (panning)

22.   Depth shot of him picking up a bow (lower half of his body)

23.   Tight shot of him being interviewed

24.   Tight shot of him holding two bows and pointing at them

25.   Depth shot of him looking down both of the bows

26.   Tight shot of him flexing the strings with his finger.

27.   Tight shot of him being interviewed

28.   Medium shot of him lighting the wick.

29.   Medium shot of him burning the bow with the fire.

30.   Another tight interview shot.

31.   Tight shot of him carving the tip with a small blade

32.   Wide shot of him scraping it again

33.   Tight shot of his face while scraping.

34.   Tight shot of him spinning it in his hands.

35.   Tight shot of him spinning the finished unstrung bow in his hands
One similarity I noticed was the use of shots. Both of the articles used a variety of depth shot when the person was being interviewed. Both of the articles had a good use of talking space. The interviewee was never off set unless he or she was moving around a bit. another similarity would be the use of tight shots I noticed in the bow making story the barley used any wide shots. in the movie rental story wide shots were used more but the camera man used a lot of tight and medium shots, just like in the bow making story One major difference I noticed was the use of sound. In the bow making story it had violin playing in the background almost all the time. In the movie rental story it had natural sound throughout the feature along with having interviewed two people instead of one.

Tuesday, May 14, 2013

1st We come up with a Topic:Cross country team carries ball to teams homecoming football game.

2nd We decide on a Focus Statement:CC team-runs-ball-far

3rd:  We Conduct Interviews to get Sound Bites to use in the interview:"our cross country team holds traditions...very dear to us"--- "I realized we forgot the football"!

4th We Shoot B-Roll to complement the sound bites- Running down the highway in the night. Overhead shot of them running beside the highway. starting the run.

5th  We Shoot our stand-up. Linking shot/ standup in the middle. while they were running past.

6th:  We Edit our story together adding Voice Overs as Seques between interviews. "their opponent this year is piquat lakes- 168 miles away"


For the Cross Country story we watch in class, describe these 6 steps. 

Sunday, May 12, 2013

MakeIt Memorable #2
 
 
In the first story, the one I read I believe that the relevance of living in Minnesota kept the remote, or mouse in this case at bay. Also I had to read it for the class. But because of its proximity it keeps peoples attention. Also when the author wrote like this it sounded like he was writing in threes : "The puck was three inches wide. The hole in the plywood was three-and-a-half inches wide. The kid and the stick were 89 feet of ice away." by writing in threes it makes the reader interested and especially want to read the story in this context. Last but not least it surprises the reader. Sure it might spell it out for you in the beginning but after you read the circumstances the boy went through to gain al that money one wouldn't think of giving it back. But the boys end up doing it because their parents felt guilty.
 
 
 
In the second story, the one I viewed, I heard the active voice of the author when he used the verb feeling and chilling instead of was and cold. he used powerful driving word rather than passive boring words. he didn't use any gobbltygook football lingo. He could have catered the story to football fans by paying more attention to the boys records or playing ability. but he payed more attention to the family aspect. The Author was very conversational during the one on one interview with the parents he kept footage of himself joking around with them and making them laugh. Everybody likes to see people laugh, that could have grabbed other peoples attention.