Category: Uncategorized

  • Los Angeles for the First Time

    I flew out to Los Angeles for my first time last Wednesday for a weeklong visit to see old friends who had moved out there for work, learn a little bit about the city and feel out the possibility of moving there myself. It was a great trip – full of new discoveries, good times with friends and a whole lot of introspection.

    Prop from 'The Shining' at the Stanley Kubrick Retrospective at the LACMA
    Prop from ‘The Shining’ at the Stanley Kubrick Retrospective at the LACMA

    I spent the first few days doing some of the traditional touristy stuff. I visited the LACMA where I saw some of my favorite contemporary artists’ work on display and walked through the Stanley Kubrick retrospective. I went to the Paley Center for Media where I browsed a collection of Steve Urkel’s bow ties as well as some original Bugs Bunny and Animaniacs sketches. I took a stroll through Runyon Canyon to get a view of the greater Los Angeles area from up high (which was helpful for navigational purposes). And of course, I strolled along the Walk of Fame on Hollywood Boulevard.

    The entertainment industry permeates the whole town. Signs on buildings and parking lots that read “Available for Filming” are a common sight. Most of the people I met – even out at bars and restaurants – worked in the industry. And everywhere I turned either looked like or actually was a location from a movie.

    Collection of Steve Urkel's bow ties at the Paley Center for Media
    Collection of Steve Urkel’s bow ties at the Paley Center for Media

    For the second half of my trip, I was really lucky to snag a few meetings with some incredible film editors, including Jay Cassidy and Crispin Struthers (Silver Linings Playbook), Adam Robinson (Spring Breakers) and Greg Finton (Waiting for Superman, It Might Get Loud) as well as some of their assistants. These meetings made a huge impression on me. It was an inspiration just to meet some of these editors whose work I’ve greatly admired, but I also got to see some of their working environments and talk with them about their processes working on some of the films they’ve edited (fun fact – the first cut of Silver Linings Playbook was five hours long!).

    View of the Hollywood Hills from Runyon Canyon
    View of the Hollywood Hills from Runyon Canyon

    The overwhelming consensus from the editors and assistant editors I met was that if I want to work on major motion pictures, I need to move to LA, and I should also do it soon. Cassidy told me that everything I’ve worked on outside of LA (i.e. everything I’ve ever worked on) doesn’t count, so it would behoove me to start getting some industry experience as soon as possible. Though production has been ramping up all over North America, especially in North Carolina (e.g. The Hunger Games, Homeland and Banshee), virtually all post production for television and film is still done in Los Angeles.

    So here’s my plan: save up some money to make the move out west, learn the Avid editing system (the industry’s standard non-linear editing software) in the meantime and try to use the connections I made during my visit to land a job after next year’s award season. It’s an exciting and scary prospect but one I feel I must consider. All the work I’ve done since high school has primed me for this new chapter of my life, and I am very excited to make it happen.

  • History through Imagery

    Earlier this year I had the privilege of working with the YWCA Central Carolinas to produce a video that played during their annual fundraiser – the We Believe Luncheon. The video was meant to describe what the organization does, explain how it affects those who participate in their various programs and encourage donors attending the luncheon to give to the YWCA.

    In our first meeting, the staff and I discussed a number of themes and objectives to aim for in the video. In addition to telling the personal stories of the YWCA participants who agreed to be interviewed, we also wanted to touch on the history of the YWCA.

    During a tour of their facility on Park Road in South Charlotte, I noticed a number of beautiful old photographs along the walls that the YWCA had taken over the years. Although the photos were decades old, they still closely resembled the day-to-day business of the current YWCA. I thought these photos would be a great way to convey the history of the organization and provide a great visual aesthetic with which to begin and end the video without taking up too much time in the narrative.

    Production still from YWCA Central Carolinas shoot
    Production still from YWCA Central Carolinas shoot

    To do this, the staff and I identified six photos to reinterpret for the video. We staged the scenarios from the photos with present-day actors (played by actual YWCA participants). I held up the original photos as references for my cinematographer, Ben Premeaux, to match with his camera. Then in post-production, I dissolved between the photos and the corresponding video footage and added some sound effects to complete the scenes.

    Beginning and ending the video this way gave a greater context to the narrative, but it also added a great introduction and ending to the video. Since the primary purpose of the video was to play to a live audience at the luncheon, the 30 second intro gave the audience some time to settle into what they were about to watch, and the final 20 seconds of the video (which also featured this photo-to-video technique) provided nice symmetry and a gradual winding down of the narrative to end the video.

    The video played to an audience of 800 people at the Westin Charlotte on February 19, 2013 and is available for viewing on the YWCA Central Carolinas’ website.

    2013 'We Believe' Luncheon video playing at the Westin Charlotte
    2013 ‘We Believe’ Luncheon video playing at the Westin Charlotte

     

  • Conceptual Visuals with Forever FC

    I was first introduced to the Charlotte hip hop collective, Forever FC, at a J. Cole concert I went to last year. At one point during his show, Cole said to the audience that we should keep our ears to the ground for a rapper from Charlotte named Lute. Once I got over the embarrassment of J. Cole knowing about an artist from my city before I did, I Googled Lute and found that he is but one of a set of artists (rappers, producers, designers, photographers, videographers and stylists) who make up the collective, Forever FC.

    I was initially struck by the professional look and sound of the group’s work. From the design of their mixtape covers to the quality of their mixes, photographs and videos, they seemed to run their operation more like an indie record label than an emerging rap group.

    When I first reached out to Forever FC, I was working on the Charlotte Video Project. We ended up producing two short documentary videos with them for the CVP – one on the group as a whole and one on one of Lute’s live performances. We eventually started talking about doing music videos together, and by the end of 2012 we decided to collaborate on visuals for two songs – “Queen City Slummin’” by Lute featuring Ry and “The Don’s Chant” by Schyler Chaise.

    To start these two projects I began by asking Lute and Schyler what words and images came to mind when they thought about their respective songs.

    Queen City Slummin’

    Lute used words like “old,” “poor” and “country” to describe his song. He imagined the video being filmed in black and white and wanted to feature an old car somehow. He pointed to the film Hustle & Flow and Common’s music video for “The Corner” as examples of a feel that he’d like to work toward.

    With that in mind, I went to a trailer park that I’d passed dozens of times leaving high school in Huntersville, NC. I snapped some photos of a few locations and sent them to Lute. He responded, “This is perfect.”

    Shed in QCS
    Location photo for “Queen City Slummin’”

    For the car, a friend lent us an old Chevy Caprice, and the story pretty easily fell into place thereafter: Lute drives the car, rapping to himself behind the wheel and picks up Ry who jumps in midway through the song to rap his verse. I cut that story in with a few shots of Lute and Ry rapping to the camera in the various locations that we’d identified beforehand, and that became the video for “Queen City Slummin’.”

    This video was meant to achieve an aesthetic – an early 90s feel reminiscent of Tribe Called Quest and early Nas, but with “The Don’s Chant,” we aimed for a more narrative-driven concept.

    The Don’s Chant

    Schyler’s video took a bit longer to conceptualize. He’d said that he wanted to work with a red, black and gold color scheme and used words like “grunge,” “dark” and “women” when describing what the song meant to him.

    I’d seen the cover art for the song, which features an old photo of boxer Mike Tyson with his infamous promoter Don King. This seemed like something interesting to build upon. Because “The Don” usually refers to Don Corleone – not Don King – this concept would turn the traditional meaning of “The Don” on its head.

    I started to do some research on Don King and came across a clip on YouTube of an interview he did with Chris Rock on the Chris Rock Show. In the interview, Rock asks King what exactly his job entails, and King launches into this wonderful little monologue in which he likens his work to that of John the Baptist. I had never seen Don King talk about his own work like this before and decided to start the video with this clip. The interview clip establishes this Don and not the other (more common) Don as well as boxing as a theme.

    Atrium in TDC
    Location photo for “The Don’s Chant”

    The overall look that we decided on was largely influenced by a location that I’d stumbled across in Downtown Charlotte – a stunningly geometric atrium in a condominium building. It looked like the inside of a deserted cruise ship. I sent Schyler a picture. “I’m digging it,” he said.

    The story came to be about Schyler’s character playing out a portion of what Don King describes in his interview. This character – who is somehow involved in the boxing industry – retrieves a briefcase (presumably full of cash) from an associate and delivers it to a boxer. However, the contents of the case are never explained, which makes for an overall ambiguous narrative. What’s in the case? Is this a dream sequence? A trailer for a larger film?

    Who knows?

    Overall I had a blast working with the Forever FC family on these projects, and I look forward to more collaborations like these in the future!