Showing posts with label Panasonic. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Panasonic. Show all posts

Mar 25, 2013

ROGUE'S BAJA 1000 PROJECT IS WRAPPED











Back in October and November we were working on a hush-hush project for Rogue Fitness.  It started when Steve Sanders, a SEAL in the US Navy, wanted to go back to his childhood roots of riding dirt bikes.  But it wasn't a short cruise through the desert or hills in California, it was the legendary Baja 1000 he had his sights set on.  Rogue commissioned the documentary and off we went.

There were three main locations for this shoot; California, Nevada and of course Baja, Mexico.  We kept the film crew lean at the beginning as as the story begun to unfold, we increased the crew. Initially, on the first location, it was just Steve and I in California.  We then brought on James Masters as a producer.  James had spent nearly a decade filming and following the Baja 1000.  While James and a few production assistants were doing preproduction work during the race week, Tim, Nate and myself were in a helicopter in Nevada filming final bike prep and testing with Steve, Bill Witt, Ryan Sanders and crew.

Most of this film was shot on the Panasonic AF100 with GoPro footage for POV (point of view) and other pepper footage.  Once the race week arrived we beefed up our camera options with a wide variety of cameras.  The diversity of tech is almost comical.  We had 1 RED EPIC, 2 AF100s, 1 Panasonic GH2, 1 Canon 7D, 1 Canon 5DmkIII, 7 GoPro Hero2s and 2 iPhone 5s.

Here's the breakdown of race week.  Bret was stationed at Ensenada, Mexico--the starting line--with a 5DmkIII.  Down south we had three chase teams with a driver and a shooter.  And those teams played leapfrog down the peninsula.  We embedded Tim with Steve's chase crew and James and I shadowed them to sixty miles outside of La Paz.  Brandt, Lynden, Jon and Nate were our other two units.

After a twenty plus minute delay at the pit, Steve got on the bike at 20:00 and started his first leg of two hundred and thirty miles in the dead of night.  Steve and Bill traded the bike three times and Bill rode it to the finish.  Twenty-eight hours after the race started, and one thousand, one hundred and fifty miles later, Steve and the team finished the Baja 1000 fourth in their class. And as Steve put it, "Not bad for the first time."

If you haven't watched the series I strongly recommend it and not just because we made it.  It is really fascinating how much work goes into this race and how fast it is over.  For Steve, the question of what lights to use was a big deal since he would be spending most of his bike time in the dark.  A dark so dark people say it eats light.  They went with Rigid Industries LED lights and half way through the race Steve was completely stoked on how great they worked.

GoPro just released a new video that was shot entirely on the Hero3.  Their film complimented ours well because it focused on trophy truck driver Bryce Menzies ride during his first six hundred miles of the race and then flashes forward to the finish line. Ours focused on Steve in San Ignacio, which picked at mile six hundred and fifty.

If you watch in Steve vs Baja 1000 Episode 4 you'll see their truck narrowly miss Steve from non other than a GoPro we had mounted on Steve's helmet.  Watch for it at 7:29.  You can hear their siren screaming as they go tearing by.

We want to thank everyone who worked on this project.  A huge thanks to Rogue Fitness and their passion to not only building the best, American Made fitness equipment, but to documenting the lifestyles of the athletes they support. A big thanks to Ryan Arciero and Larry Roeseler from Team Herbst, the film units comprised of Todd, Nate, Lynden, Tim, James, Bret, Joh, Brandt, Chris and the two random guys that rode along. And thanks to Score International for putting on such a grueling race.

We've embedded the four Steve vs Baja 1000 episodes here and included GoPro's video that shows the first half of the race.  Let me just say we love how they just let the video live and breath during the race without any music over it.





Nov 14, 2011

Back From Ohio But Not To Reality



We were in Ohio last week filming with Rogue Fitness (subscribe to their YouTube) and it was a great shoot.  Among things we shot were a how-to of sort on building a garage gym, some demos of new equipment and some random, goofy things with Mikko.  Mikko is funny and just a great guy.  Everyone else is terrific too.  Rogue had Tony Blauer come in and give his seminar on how to Be Your Own Bodyguard.  Some great stuff and helpful for real world applications.  He teaches you how to harness your natural tendency to flinch as a fast and powerful defense tool.  Cool stuff.  Nice work Tony.

The footage is back in the office and we're processing it now and as we transcode it we're putting it on a new Promise Technology 12TB Pegasus Thunderbolt RAID.  We picked it up to test out a basic network sharing solution.  Several of our clients have several TBs (terabytes) of footage that we are always accessing from several drives.  The RAID solution is a way to have all the footage online, with enterprise speeds and data protection.  If this works well, we'll probably move to a larger 32TB RAID, depending on a few things, one being future Sonnet Thunderbolt peripherals, among other brands.

With a gigabit switch, we can hardwire each editing bay to each other and we can pull one or two streams of footage to each.  This is perfect for assistant editors to pull clips, prep sequences, and process footy while the editor works on that, or a different project off of the same RAID.  Not as robust as a Fiber or 10Gigabit Ethernet solution but certainly a stepping stone and great for trials.  Once we move on from this  to a larger, more robust system we can repurpose the Pegasus as a back up for RAW footage with its lightning fast (sorry for the lame pun) transfer speeds and larger capacity.

We're shooting with Southern Virginia University this week while we work through some edits for a few other clients.  I'm bring Tim along to film with me while Nate manages the editors here at base camp.

As we part I wanted to leave you with something to make your day a little brighter, a remixed song from Coldplay's new album, Mylo Xyloto -- UFO.



Aug 2, 2011

Rogue Fitness Commercials Have Debuted...On ESPN3





The 2011 Reebok CrossFit Games have come and gone and so has the debut of our 7 commercials we created for Rogue Fitness.  They've been a great client and we absolutely love working with them.  Above is a playlist for the 7 spots.  I was surprised to hear they ended up airing on ESPN3 during the live broadcast of the games.  There are a lot of different flavors so I'm curious which one you like best and why?  They were a blast to do, from writing, filming/directing and editing.

For the techy people reading, we shot it with two Panasonic AG AF100 cameras.  If you want to know more than that just ask.  Tim was great to work with and I'm glad he wanted to be a part.  I'm looking forward to some more.

It's been a few busy weeks and they've been a lot of fun.  It started with Seattle, then Oregon, California and now in North Carolina.

Seattle - Just Serve - Episode 1
Oregon - NASCAR Doc - Chasing Spencer
California - 2011 Reebok CrossFit Games
North Carolina - Just Serve - Episode 2

The crew has changed on this second episode.  Tim and Ethan are both doing other work.  Rhett and Burke Lewis are on the crew in their stead.  Early mornings, long days and short nights need to be offset by a long night.  That's my cue to head to bed.

May 17, 2011

Rogue Fitness Commercial Shoot - Columbus, Ohio

I've brought Tim Irwin with me on a commercial shoot for Rogue Fitness this week and while making our way here we stopped off in an airport and while changing planes we encountered this.  Pop quiz… What is this and where is it?

Day 2 here the beautiful capitol city of Ohio -- Columbus -- if you haven't freshened up on your geography lately.  The last time I was here was during The Arnold Classic a few months back and the weather is pretty much the same, cold, windy and wet.  Although it is now 40 degrees and not 19 so there is green on the trees.

We're shooting with two Panasonic AF100s and a mix of Lumix, Nikon, Sigma and Pentax lenses.  We also have a small slider dolly that has been fun to use a bit too.  Mostly, however, we're sticking to our guns -- handheld and sticks.  Today consisted of welding, drilling, cutting, scraping, grinding, pressing...a lot of 'ings.  The commercials are gonna be great and the concepts are pretty solid but quite simple, just the way we like it.  I've been going overboard lately and complicating a lot of things when in the end we need a solid storyline and stellar footage.  Luckily we have five more day of just that!

We have a 4 card SDHC offloading solution for now (this post talks about the problem).  It works well -- we just offloaded 4 16GB shot cards to redundant drives at once (see the picture below) and had no problems.  It just isn't as clean as the cube with four slots.  It consists of a Belkin USB four port hub, two Lexar Professional compactflash/SD card readers, a SanDisk reader and the MacBook Pro SDXC card slot.  To offload the footage we're using the trusty ShotPut Pro application.  Love, love love it!  And checking all offloaded footage in Final Cut Pro (soon to be Final Cut Pro X -- AND we'll be able to edit in the native codec rather than transcode everything)!

Mar 26, 2011

Arnold - The Final Countdown



Sent this off to Rogue Fitness right before I came to New Zealand.  This was a piece we did for Arnold and his crew.  It's pretty simple, consisting of Arnold counting down the race, being blown away at the intensity of the athletes and everyone smiling and being stoked.  This was filmed at the Arnold Classic in Ohio a few weeks ago.

We shot this on our new Panasonic AF100 with a Nikon 17-35mm f/2.8 lens using a (I forget the name of our adapter) german adapter.  I love the color spacing on the camera.  The blacks are deep and the image is just superb.  It has texture, character and a richness that is just groovy.  We also stuck a GoPro on Rob Orlando's head as he ran the course.  We had to color correct the GoPro to somewhat match the AG AF100.

For now you'll need to select the link below to watch the piece.

ARNOLD - THE FINAL COUNTDOWN