A few simple tips for the producers of this video. 1. If you aren't going to mic up the individual who is introducing the speaker then just cut it from the video. You don't need to include whatever the person is saying. We can't make it out anyway. 2. Lights. Existing light is not sufficient. Rent, borrow or steal some basic lighting so that your speaker pops out from the environment. They are the most important thing in the frame. 3. Shoot the speaker tight. We don't need to see the backs of the heads of those of have come to listen to the presentation. Start with a wide shot if you want to establish location, but then zoom into the speaker at the podium. This is relatively easy if they aren't the kind of speaker that walks around the room quite a bit.4. Don't worry about shooting the screen. It looks like hell in the edited down video anyway. Ask the presenter ahead of time for their visuals and edit them into the video in post. It will look far better. If you have the luxury of a system that allows you to live switch multiple sources then use a scan converter and split the signal into your switcher and out to the projection system. When you have the option of switching live multiple sources and more than one camera use the second camera to shoot the screen. Still use the digital copies when editing, but the live camera can zoom into specific areas of the screen if the presenter emphasizes something specific or uses a laser pointer. If you only have one camera then say to hell with the screen entirely. If your presenter uses PowerPoint you can take the file and export all of the images in order as jpegs. Add a motion background in your NLE if you want to get fancy and render the jpegs as an overlay. It's also a good cheat for when you have a jerky camera movement that you want to hid.5. Record the best possible audio. Even if that means using an additional mic not wired into the house system. Lav mics and those wireless headset types have become really inexpensive. If your camera isn't capable of taking in a XLR source or multiple sources then record wild sound off of the onboard mic and double record the guest using a hand held recording device like a H4N. They are awesome. Not that expensive. You can even rent them cheaply for a couple of days. Just make sure that you are recording. www.amazon.ca/Zoom-H4N-Digital-Multitrack-Recorder/dp/B01DPOXS8I/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1488779358&sr=8-1&keywords=h4n
At 1:02 he goes into a description of Israel-Palestine that could have come from last week and this was nine years ago. The cynic in me suspects nine years from now it will also apply.
Stories ... we think we are getting something from stories. First there is experience. There there are stories. Then there is fiction and entertainment. And somewhere in all of it are lies.
The last line (48:00) shows his cards. It seems that for all the talk about stories and their fundamental importance to human moral imagination, Bloom thinks we'd be better off leaving them out of important decisions that need 'rational' solutions. But you could also draw other conclusions, such as the ways these faculties could work together, or how so-called rational thought (i.e. those philosophers and scientists who rationalize genocides) needs stories (and is itself produced by stories). Seems a lot of cherry-picking of studies and general appeals to intuition to make his provocative point. Perhaps the book is more subtle. He's a good storyteller (but couldn't watch the swaying)
He is such a good speaker.
Fascinating talk. Thanks for uploading it!
This guy is fabulous
54:20 what a superb question.
A few simple tips for the producers of this video. 1. If you aren't going to mic up the individual who is introducing the speaker then just cut it from the video. You don't need to include whatever the person is saying. We can't make it out anyway. 2. Lights. Existing light is not sufficient. Rent, borrow or steal some basic lighting so that your speaker pops out from the environment. They are the most important thing in the frame. 3. Shoot the speaker tight. We don't need to see the backs of the heads of those of have come to listen to the presentation. Start with a wide shot if you want to establish location, but then zoom into the speaker at the podium. This is relatively easy if they aren't the kind of speaker that walks around the room quite a bit.4. Don't worry about shooting the screen. It looks like hell in the edited down video anyway. Ask the presenter ahead of time for their visuals and edit them into the video in post. It will look far better. If you have the luxury of a system that allows you to live switch multiple sources then use a scan converter and split the signal into your switcher and out to the projection system. When you have the option of switching live multiple sources and more than one camera use the second camera to shoot the screen. Still use the digital copies when editing, but the live camera can zoom into specific areas of the screen if the presenter emphasizes something specific or uses a laser pointer. If you only have one camera then say to hell with the screen entirely. If your presenter uses PowerPoint you can take the file and export all of the images in order as jpegs. Add a motion background in your NLE if you want to get fancy and render the jpegs as an overlay. It's also a good cheat for when you have a jerky camera movement that you want to hid.5. Record the best possible audio. Even if that means using an additional mic not wired into the house system. Lav mics and those wireless headset types have become really inexpensive. If your camera isn't capable of taking in a XLR source or multiple sources then record wild sound off of the onboard mic and double record the guest using a hand held recording device like a H4N. They are awesome. Not that expensive. You can even rent them cheaply for a couple of days. Just make sure that you are recording. www.amazon.ca/Zoom-H4N-Digital-Multitrack-Recorder/dp/B01DPOXS8I/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1488779358&sr=8-1&keywords=h4n
Paul, stand still damnit
he always does that
At 1:02 he goes into a description of Israel-Palestine that could have come from last week and this was nine years ago. The cynic in me suspects nine years from now it will also apply.
Stories ... we think we are getting something from stories.
First there is experience.
There there are stories.
Then there is fiction and entertainment.
And somewhere in all of it are lies.
The last line (48:00) shows his cards. It seems that for all the talk about stories and their fundamental importance to human moral imagination, Bloom thinks we'd be better off leaving them out of important decisions that need 'rational' solutions. But you could also draw other conclusions, such as the ways these faculties could work together, or how so-called rational thought (i.e. those philosophers and scientists who rationalize genocides) needs stories (and is itself produced by stories). Seems a lot of cherry-picking of studies and general appeals to intuition to make his provocative point. Perhaps the book is more subtle. He's a good storyteller (but couldn't watch the swaying)
Dexter is a good example
I love the talk...but who the fuck would put a cat in a dumpster?!!!!!!
In this case a woman. Cat in dumpster, meh.
How about 80-90% of parents still abuse(spank) their children, that's even more facked up.
Zizek?
So the reason Game of Thrones is so popular is because it's about sex, violence and rich people.