Filmmaking : How to Shoot a Music Video
To shoot a music video, get a lot of creative coverage of the band playing the song and then create a separate narrative for the story connected to the plot of the video. Use a lot of visual energy when shooting music videos by considering tips from a filmmaker in this free video on making music videos. Expert: Nathan Boehme Contact: www.nathans-reel.com Bio: Nathan Boehme is a writer, director and editor who currently lives and works in Los Angeles, Calif. Filmmaker: Nathan Boehme
Final show clip and wrap party for the final episode of CBC’s longest running TV series. The series was longlived but the shows that stick out most for me were all prior to 1980—prior to around the time McCloskey (buddy to everybody, even Relic) died. The show was memorable for the central gritty conflict between idealistic and honourable Greek Nick Adonidas with his tug boat (Persephone) and the rough, crusty curmudgeonly loner Relic and his ultra fast but suitably beat up jet boat, battling each other for stray logs along coastal waters of British Columbia. It was the source of tension and humour alike. The sparse boundary characters and the setting (remembering the show took place in a small village cove) provided a warm blanket. The episodes I remember best (aside from Nick or Huey or Jesse or whoever, trapped under a log, barge or barrel as the tide comes in) were 1. Fools’ Gold — where Nick and Relic both bait each other with real / bogus gold sites (many years later and influence on Bre-X, with the shotgunned nuggets) 2. Relic’s Toothache — with the baked Alaska sequence 3. The RC Airplane battle w Relic vs all challengers. The little machingun was inspirational. That was an early one! Anyway the best of the shows were as decent as any good US TV show at the time in the 1970s. Unfortunately the 1980s came along and blew the grittiness and earthiness present on TV,. Family shows became the it thing to be (Family Ties, Cosby Show etc) and then the CBC tried to …
Video Rating: 4 / 5