Showing posts with label Hillman Curtis. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hillman Curtis. Show all posts

Monday, December 27, 2010

Solo Integrated Multimedia Videojournalism - 2011 look foward

The transition in which the image gradually becomes clear on viewmagazine.tv is allegorical of video story telling I have been going through since formally from 1987.

On viewmagazine.tv I have included the following:

SOLO INTEGRATED MULTIMEDIA VIDEOJOURNALISM
"In the 90s groups of videojournalists who considered themselves creatives working with photographers, broadcasters, journalists etc, conceived of an integrated approach to storytelling in news et al.

It would bridge multiple apps in varying forms, reconfiguring a visual praxis and plastic semiotic on and offline. This is one of those stories. The site-build, videos, interactivity and articles is the work of one author, a senior lecturer and International conference speaker".

SKIP MEDIA Click for VIDEOJOURNALISM EXPERIENCE INCLUDING CAIRO VJS

The Retwitter Show titles - journalism 2046 from david dunkley gyimah on Vimeo.

Put another way, in the 90s groups of videojournalists begun to crack applications like Flash and Director, mixed with After Effects. The visual praxis is a reference to change in style and language over the years.

If you look at a 1960s film there are things they do, that today would be considered outdated. The average news interview cut was 30 seconds plus, 43 in cases. Today, 3-12 seconds and you're out. What's the point of the SOT (sound on tape) then other than a reinforcing of the authors inherent bias or point of view.

Similarly the visual praxis has altered from 16mm grainy to 35mm glossy to mimicry in HD.  Academics would say HD mimesis :)

Plastic is a term used by the Arnheim and later Andre Bazin, one of the first film scholars, to describe film; referred to as the plastic arts.

So back in the 90s for want of a better name videojournalism assumed this all encompassing medium. It became plasticine, highly malleable, incredibly adept and frankly as limiting as ones imagination.

Videojournalism programming

Traditional programming which we can't jettison yet, mixed with idea forming for the net age, looks simplistically like this above. Each module represents a wider circuit of ideas.

Now here's the fun bit, which we're all having a nice little ding dong with at the moment.

If you cast your eyes across the book shelf of multimedia (Flash) film, art or music in your library you'll be lost in the sea of hardbacks, but when it comes to videojournalism - what do you see?

One of the best books for multimedia journalism using Flash is  Flash journalism by Mindy McAdam's.

In the 90s in the absence of any notion multimedia had any relation with journalism we sought out books like Masters of Flash, featuring the likes of the the fabulous Hillman Curtis, Brendan Dawes, Joshua Davis  - they became our mentors for most of Soho in the 90s. By default we looked for answers beyond classical journalism.

I remember it well when one senior BBC manager exclaimed: What's with this thing Flash? and he was a head of interactivity.

Advances in coding structure of Flash is such that today Hillman's site advises against purchasing his mega seller, but you only have to look at work like this to see how far ahead he was. My favourites are:
What made them exceptional wasn't just the creativity, but the functionality trying to push flash down 56k modems. That they did was genius and is still a function of google indexing today. The faster the site loads, the more appealing you are to Google's SEO robots.

In fact I can own up now, the coding structure - which I learnt helped me land the job as one of Lennox Lewis' promo, site and film makers. Lennox at the time was the heavyweight boxing champion of the world - about to take on Mike Tyson.

One of those sporting feats and occasions I'll never forget.
Filming Lennox Lewis training for his big world fight

There were magazine's galore as well e.g Computers Arts that showed the dark art and also inspired, today usurped by .Net magazine.

Cast your eyes - what do you see?
So when you look around for videojournalism, what do you see? There are a smattering of books - all good by the way starting off with Videojournalism: The Definitive Gudie to Mutliemedia skilled Television Production.

The book is out of print by the way and the author is an old friend from the group of videojournalists from 1994.

But the interesting thing is just as there are a million books on all the other creative fields, so there will be room for this nascent form, videojournalism to be scored in books a plenty.

Though I admit at this stage I agree with my publisher who sought a name change and different direction for the book I was/am writing. "The discipline is too limiting at the moment", she said. She's right.

It's not so much that you'll want to learn videojournalism, which can often be television masquerading in see through-clothes, but that you'll want to understand what the artist you're reading knows and how.
  • Where do they get their ideas from?
  • How are they inspired?
  • What are their epiphanies?
  • How do they deconstruct and construct their work?
  • What is their methodology?
For every artist, willing to submit themselves and publicly contest the artistry of their form may have something to say, that may interest you.


That's not to say you have to be over 25 to say something expressive [yes that can be patronising] since experience is independent of age, but we can't also discard the fact that if you reported the Vietnam War, you'd have experience to have reported the Gulf.

There's a reason why many journalism professors tend to be post 25, because aside from their knowledge, what you really want to tap into is their experience.

When ex-students talk to me about the job market in the UK, I remember my own private battle and the closed TV shop of the late 80s/ early 90s.

My sorry predicament would lead me to board a plane to meet a contact I had never met and defacto emigrate to South Africa to report from the danger zones of the townships.
David reporting for the BBC World Service from Kaylesha township

All of a sudden experiential learning begins to play a part.

They, multimediast, all have some back stories that compelled them to do things we might marvel at. There are obvious caveats to the form. In the latest work in Cairo, Salma- a newly minted videojournalism says she loved the independence, and flexibility.

To you it may be something beyond Salma's experience. How do I reconcile the mechanical camera with my own subjectivity? What is real and what isn't?

The award winning British journalist and documentary maker John Pilger opens up a debate that the camera, the device we place absolute trust in, can lie.  It can lie because it's not recording the truth, or the journalist or videojournalist is being too selective, because they can or are unconsciously being hoodwinked.

By the way this criticism wasn't beyond being levelled at the father of documentary, Robert Flaherty in the 1930s.

So our interest in the form is predicated not on just on normative values, but the experience of using a camera and failing, and learning from that to succeed. We read stories about stories. The stories we try to conceive ourselves laden with passion, conflict, information, hold us together.

And to keep our interests we look to cultural theorists e.g. Brian McNair to guide us, to keep us ahead of the creative curve. Take the concept of John Caldwell's 'Second shift aesthetics', where a multimedia story supports its television version, or how we think and that method of how thinking is changing.

A colleague of mine is presently researching the next generation of collaborative thinking. She used to work as a researcher for NASA, so her research I venture will have huge interest.



New Visualisation

Meanwhile, 3D TV is taking off,differentiating itself from online. Now a 3DTV every 7 minutes is going to a home near you from one of the big high street chains .

That surely will affect the 360 panoramic of video making because say the experts depths must be enhanced for the effect, camera positions and rapid cuts will be kept to a minimum to allow the aesthetic impulse to take effect.

"Some stories won't work", adds Brian Lens, Sky's Product 3D development, talking on the BBC's You and Yours consumer show.

 Then there's tablet visualisation. Take this interview I did in 2005 in Norway with Phillips's Frank Daems about their new e-reader - the birth of the tablet. How it's all changed. Or think about the apps market, or as they rounded up on You and Yours, the future of social space from the laptop to the living room.

So the future of the video form, still growing looks bright indeed, and just as there was a group of bespoke multimedia artists using video in the 90s, in the 00s we have videoists specialising in multimedia.

The fields wide open.

End

David continues to be excited by developments and in 2011 will be a juror for the Royal Television Society's Innovation in Journalism

Tuesday, January 22, 2008

The design of online film making

I'm tipping a big hat here to Master of Flash turned Master of online film, Hillman Curtis, who is an extraordinary inspiration.

A number of speakers from Flash on the Beach went out for a spaghetti session couple of years back and I was able quizz him on some of the things he does.

That was after this interview here which, yes I'm gushing, but seriously if you don't know his work, I'd recommend you look at his site and short films.

On pentagram, he achieves the most incredible shallow depths of films, so I dropped him a line and he revealed how he gets it.

You've gota love film cuz Hillman engineers different lenses on his DVcam and the truth is it's not that simple a, and b, you need a really good cam op to get focus.

The aesthetics on this makes the point

If you subscribe to American Cinematographer, you'll find some handy tips in there which could easily influence your VJ shoot.

Tuesday, January 01, 2008

2008- Training, hyperlocal, China & the BBC


In three weeks time I will be interviewing a key BBC figure on News, News Futures and Multimedia.

All I'll say in the meantime is you'll unlikely to see many one-on-ones with him ( If any, particularly outside the news belt) so I'm very pleased. Thanks to those e.g. Paul Brannan, Peter Barron etc that helped out on this.

The inteview will be used for
  • A feature on Multimedia now previewing on Viewmagazine.tv
  • Presentations at Cultural Exchange and World Press Association
  • and some work on a PhD

    But I have an idea which I hope we can share in.

    I'd like to invite a video question from you which I will put to my interviewee and I'd like to use your question in the feature, but will also entertain posting your segment to you, if you want.

    There are a couple of caveats to make this work really neatly.

  • That hopefully it'll be a good spread for use on an interactive map.
  • That you're a video shooter/ vlogger so that I can link to your story/vlog. Who knows we might even get a vlog carnival going.
  • That I'll probabably take about 6-10 questions, so you'll have to be to the point.

    I'll come back to this again with more details closer, but in the meantime if you want to email me to talk about this please do so on davidg@jounalist.com or my viemagazine account. Just to save any spamming, if you're a viewmagazine.tv viewer you'll easily find it.

    So there we are.

    It's a mad, but clear idea for collaboration.

    Just please don't ask how you'd make a living doing things like this. LOL

    China
    A couple of details to sort, but my colleague informs me that we should be off to Peking University mid year. He, Kienda Hoji is a visiting professor there in music and law and is some way in learning how to speak and write mandarin.

    I have barely scratched the surface and will be picking up the odd tip from some of the Masters students at Westminster.

    This year it won't be lost on many that this is China's year, and not only because of the Olympics.

    If you attended OFF event in New York, which a good friend Rob Chiu presented at you would have come across the incredible Leonard Shlain who wrote the Alphabet and the Goddess, the conflict between word and image.

    Inside Leonard talks about how different parts of the brain are developed from reading linearly ( western) and Chinese characters, which has provided Kienda and me with thoughts about working multimedia with our hosts.

    It's all a germ of an idea, but I'll come back to it after some clarity.

    Hyperlocal
    Two years ago you'd still be ooming and arming about video; not any more.

    We're all film makers, but does that mean saturation in subject matter etc.

    Of course not.

    But one area that has recieved a lot of attention but not much action is hyperlocal; I'm talking UK.

    So this is going to an interesting year for hyperlocal news: News you can use.

    I''ll make the links on this pilot/draft site fully active soon.


    Training
    And less I forget, training, training, training.

    But this year, I expect to see some fairly non conventional outfits take to video, videojournalism and multimedia either as a way of documenting their work or teling their own stories.

    Hillman Curtis, Flash Guru turned Award winning film maker has made a wonderful film on Pentagram; the tones and textures are just drop dead gorgeous, plus his depth of field comes across as if he were using a swing and shift lens.

    Take a look for yourself.

    You can see the interview I did with Hillman here, which I hope to update when I next get the opportunity to bump into him

    But back to videojournalism, expect to see more museums and municipal bodies get involved.
  • Sunday, September 30, 2007

    Great films online - go watch



    Go vote for Hillman. Soldiers has made it into the finals of 800 International shorts entered in filminute 07

    Probably one of the nicest, talented individuals, you'll ever meet.

    I'm so much one of his biggest fans.

    From pioneering Flash design to now some of the best online films you'll see anywhere, Hillman does it like no one else.

    It's the simplicity, elegance, magic. . .

    Here for his Film, "Soldiers"

    Here for my interview with Hillman