Ted Fisher, the editor of the New York Times' 'Frugal Traveler' video podcast 
just posted a 
really great list of thoughts on one-person production.  Thought it'd be useful 
to many 
you... and hell, I already Twittered it and left it as a comment on New Tee 
Vee.  Why not 
here, too?  Ted's an awesome guy.  Share the love!

http://actualities.blogspot.com/


1. At each location, shoot:
a. a 60 second take of atmospheric sound or "room tone"
b. a wide establishing shot
c . a medium establishing shot
d. a closeup, generally signage
e. some shots of the subject entering the place and walking around the place
f. some shots of the subject standing in the place, as if you were saying, "and 
then I met 
this guy"

2. set up an interview: 
a. with sound being the most important aspect
b. shoot cutaways of something -- hands moving, whatever -- so you can chop up 
interview bits
c. don't cut off the end of an interview segment -- keep rolling
d. with depth -- look at the space, set up so you can use its greatest 
dimension, then get 
your subject near the camera and anything significant far back but in the frame

3. get material that gets us from here to there -- traveling footage is the 
easiest material 
to gather

4. use a tripod when possible, or lock your standing position

5. when moving, only pan or move the camera if you have a plan for where it is 
going. do 
not "pan to nowhere"

6. think in terms of gathering a beginning and ending action / shot. that is 
all you are 
searching for -- you'll find plenty of middle

7. think in terms of needing a shot that shows one state visually that will be 
paired with 
something that reveals change visually at the end. what do we see at the 
beginning that 
we can show totally changed at the end?

8. use the camera for revealing. every shot should reveal. Here is this, here 
is this, the 
camera moves around the corner and we see this, this guy steps in the frame and 
we see 
this, this thing moves out of the way and we see this. reveal.

9. don't bother thinking wide / medium / closeup. Look at the shot you just 
took, and now 
get one that is significantly different -- different angle and different 
composition and 
different scale

10. consider early whether you are using voiceover or not, and if you are a 
character of 
not. if not, then you have to cover all the things that tell us what is 
happening, what just 
happened, and what is at stake while you are shooting.



Mark*

http://cheapdatesphilly.blogspot.com
http://livemusicjournal.blogspot.com
http://thepovertyjetset.com

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