Shooting Effective Video on Your Smartphone - Kathy Kieliszewski - Austin NewsTrain - Aug. 22-23,...

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NewsTrain instructor Kathy Kieliszewski helps journalists shoot better video using their smartphones. She provides tips on buying low-cost equipment; achieving better lighting, audio and framing; and sequencing your shots. Kieliszewski, the Detroit Free Press' director of photo and video, gave this presentation as part of the NewsTrain workshop in Austin, Texas, on Aug. 22-23, 2014. Please see associated handouts: Video Terms, Lots of Dos and a Few Big Don'ts in Video, and Learning to Fly Exercise. For more information about NewsTrain, a traveling workshop for journalists sponsored by Associated Press Media Editors, please visit http://www.apme.com/?AboutNewsTrain.

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Video shooting Kathy Kieliszewski | Detroit Free Press

Video Tripod Beanbag

Tripods and tripod mounts

Gorillapod by Joby

Tripods and tripod mounts

iStabilizer

Tripods and tripod mounts

MCam

Tripods and tripod mounts

•A-roll

•B-roll

•Natural sounds

Basic video components

Gathering good audio

•Mic your main subjects.

•The importance of headphones

•Listen to the room noise.

•Listen for and eliminate distracting

sounds.

•Get your microphone as near to

the sound source as possible.

Microphones

Wired lavalier

Adaptor cords

CLICK ON PHOTO TO VIEW VIDEO

BMX Park | Natural Sounds

CLICK ON PHOTO TO VIEW VIDEO

Driving Detroit | Natural Sound

The art of the interview

Framing and lighting

• Asking the right questions

• Be quiet.

• Allow for the edit.

• Active interviewing

• Time codes and transcribing

Conducting the interview

The importance of sequencing

Kolan the Bowler | Sequencing

CLICK ON PHOTO TO VIEW VIDEO

How to sequence •Wide, medium, tight/close-up

•Perspectives, point of view

•Action and reaction

•Framing each shot

•10-second rule

Wide shot

Medium shot

Point-of-view shot

Detail shot/cutaway

Reaction shot

Shooting the footage

•What’s the action?

•Moments

•Transition shots

•Shooting sequences

•Thinking about the edit

The Exercise Time to Fly

Grab a phone or a partner with a

phone, and each of you takes turns

shooting a series of shots while the

other makes a paper airplane.

Remember to look for wide,

medium, tights, action, reaction and

point-of-view shots. Shoot each

shot as a single clip.

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