Re: [videoblogging] Coors Light Beer and Youtube

2008-06-02 Thread Jill H
here is a follow up article by jackson west
http://valleywag.com/5012391/youtube-star-jill-hanner-on-hawking-coors-light

On Mon, Jun 2, 2008 at 4:51 AM, Irina <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

>   so when u say most of it was fabricated
> which parts are those?
>
> On 5/31/08, jt_hanner <[EMAIL PROTECTED] >
> wrote:
> >
> > Hey everyone,
> >
> > an interesting article has appeared about me on silicon alley. No one
> > contacted me for an interview, and most of it is fabricated.. I think
> > it is funny
> >
> >
> >
> http://www.alleyinsider.com/2008/5/the_hot_youtube_chick_that_coors_doesnt_want_you_to_see
> >
> > Jill
> >
> > youtube.com/xgobobeanx
> >
> >
> >
>
> --
> http://geekentertainment.tv
>
> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>
>  
>


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



[videoblogging] OECD seeking YouTube video : “How can the Internet make the world a better place?”

2008-06-02 Thread WWWhatsup

The OECD is organising a Ministerial Meeting on the Future of the  
Internet Economy on 17-18 June 2008 in Seoul, Korea. Government  
ministers from more than 40 countries, global business and civil  
society leaders, academics and technical experts will meet with more  
than 1000 participants to forge broad principles that can provide an  
enabling policy environment for the Internet Economy.
To ensure the widest participation to this event, Angel Gurría, the  
OECD Secretary General, invites Internet users to upload a short video  
on a dedicated YouTube video channel answering the following question:
“How can the Internet make the world a better place?”

The OECD will select some of the best contributions and, in Seoul,  
will ask ministers and meeting participants to react in a video.
We would like to invite you to record your answer to this question in  
a short 1 or 2 minute video and to upload it on YouTube. You are  
totally free with regard to how you want to address the question and  
the content of your answer.
Entries will be closed the day before the opening of the Seoul  
Ministerial Meeting (16 June 2008).
The links below will help you upload your video on the Web site.

Links
· Watch the  OECD Secretary General announcement: 
www.youtube.com/FutureInternet
· OECD Press release:
·  www.oecd.org/document/3/0,3343,en_2649_201185_40713859_1_1_1_1,00.html

· Seoul Ministerial Meeting:
· www.oecd.org/FutureInternet
· www.oecdministerialseoul2008.org

· Upload your video: www.youtube.com/FutureInternet - Click  “Submit”
· How to upload a video on YouTube: 
http://help.youtube.com/support/youtube/bin/answer.py?answer=57924&topic=10525
· What video formats can be uploaded: 
http://help.youtube.com/support/youtube/bin/answer.py?answer=55744&topic=10526
· YouTube Support center: http://help.youtube.com/support/youtube/

The OECD

The Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development is a global  
forum for new ideas to create prosperity in developed and developing  
countries. Its members, the governments of 30 market democracies, work  
together to address the economic, social and governance challenges of  
globalisation as well as to exploit its opportunities (www.oecd.org/about) 
.

Figures and facts about YouTube:
· Over 240 million users, of which 66% in the 18-34 age group.
· 2/3rds of traffic outside of the US.
· Hundreds of millions of video are viewed daily.
· The Davos Question, a similar initiative, has had over 4  million 
views.


---
 WWWhatsup NYC
http://pinstand.com - http://punkcast.com
--- 



[videoblogging] Re: Working with multiple cameras

2008-06-02 Thread Bill Cammack
100,000 gazillion percent agreed with Richard on letting the cameras
run. :D

Tape is cheap compared to hours of an editor sitting there figuring
out which section of your footage matches which other section.  Even
if you're doing it yourself, it's a waste of your time, where you
could be working on other projects or making THIS project better.

Leave the cameras running.  If you need to, stand somewhere where both
cameras can see you and clap once so that both cameras get the sound
and both cameras see your hands come together.  When it's time to
edit, load both 1-hour tapes fully to your drives, line up or
multiclip the claps and work from there.  The time savings are well
worth it.

It's not exactly on-topic, but here's a two-camera shoot I did with
Bre Pettis  and Justin Day  =>


Same principle.  Start the cameras, let them roll, drop all the
unwanted footage on the cutting room floor.

Bill Cammack
http://billcammack.com

--- In videoblogging@yahoogroups.com, "Richard Amirault"
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> - Original Message - 
> From: "J. Rhett Aultman"
> (snip)
> > So, now I have two camcorders, and this means that, light conditions
> > permitting, I'm doing more multiple-camera stuff.  I just got done
> > stitching together most of the footage from my first major
multi-camera
> > piece, and I've been noticing how much of my time goes syncing up the
> > two cameras.  Picking the right camera at the right time?  That's
easy.
> > But every clip must by synced for both cameras before I can do that.
> >
> > I'm lucky that this is a sporting event with a lot of referee
whistles,
> > so I can use that to get two shots in sync, but it's still fairly
> > tedious and time consuming.  I'm curious...is there a better way to be
> > doing this?  I realize now why it's so much easier to run all the
> > cameras to a common control room and have a director calling out the
> > camera to switch to.
> 
> Another technique is to start both cameras .. and LET THEM BOTH RUN
.. until 
> either the tape runs out or the event is over.
> 
> That way you sync up once, at the beginning, and then it should be
fine for 
> the whole tape. Depending on the type of shoot you may end up
throwing away 
> (editing out) a LOT of footage .. but it is a valid technique.
> 
> Richard Amirault
> Boston, MA, USA
> http://n1jdu.org
> http://bostonfandom.org
> http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J7hf9u2ZdlQ
>




Re: [videoblogging] Working with multiple cameras

2008-06-02 Thread Richard Amirault
- Original Message - 
From: "J. Rhett Aultman"
(snip)
> So, now I have two camcorders, and this means that, light conditions
> permitting, I'm doing more multiple-camera stuff.  I just got done
> stitching together most of the footage from my first major multi-camera
> piece, and I've been noticing how much of my time goes syncing up the
> two cameras.  Picking the right camera at the right time?  That's easy.
> But every clip must by synced for both cameras before I can do that.
>
> I'm lucky that this is a sporting event with a lot of referee whistles,
> so I can use that to get two shots in sync, but it's still fairly
> tedious and time consuming.  I'm curious...is there a better way to be
> doing this?  I realize now why it's so much easier to run all the
> cameras to a common control room and have a director calling out the
> camera to switch to.

Another technique is to start both cameras .. and LET THEM BOTH RUN .. until 
either the tape runs out or the event is over.

That way you sync up once, at the beginning, and then it should be fine for 
the whole tape. Depending on the type of shoot you may end up throwing away 
(editing out) a LOT of footage .. but it is a valid technique.

Richard Amirault
Boston, MA, USA
http://n1jdu.org
http://bostonfandom.org
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J7hf9u2ZdlQ



Re: [videoblogging] Coors Light Beer and Youtube

2008-06-02 Thread Irina
so when u say most of it was fabricated
which parts are those?

On 5/31/08, jt_hanner <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>   Hey everyone,
>
> an interesting article has appeared about me on silicon alley. No one
> contacted me for an interview, and most of it is fabricated.. I think
> it is funny
>
>
> http://www.alleyinsider.com/2008/5/the_hot_youtube_chick_that_coors_doesnt_want_you_to_see
>
> Jill
>
> youtube.com/xgobobeanx
>
>  
>



-- 
http://geekentertainment.tv


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