General and Gaming > Off Topic
IGF/GDC Awards Show
desocietas:
Looks like a pretty sweet AV setup was used. Did they utilize any IMAG or were the side screens used strictly for prerecorded footage?
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The side screens were used for image magnification of the hosts and, kind of like Oscars, had guys on the floor with cameras ready to point at anyone who was walking up to the stage to accept their award. Pretty snazzy production. The center circular screen didn't really have much other than prerecorded text.
Oh, and the side screens would cut to trailers and such for nominees and the occasional Mega64 transitions.
Gamespot had it streaming, so I think everything on those side screens was probably what showed up in the videocast. If you have time to watch it (http://www.gamespot.com/events/gdc-2012/video.html?sid=6365134&category=highlights), the Warren Spector speech was pretty good.
I was hoping they had the IGF awards on the site, too, this year, but I can't seem to locate it. That one was actually a little better in some ways, but maybe because it wasn't all the big names we've already heard over and over again.
desocietas:
No, I just think he's an arrogant, ignorant douchebag.
http://www.develop-online.net/news/40061/GDC-Japanese-dev-mocked-your-games-suck
Sorry for veering this off-topic.
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Wow, that's crazy. I think I saw a Kotaku headline about that comment but didn't realize it was him... That's an insensitive response to a fellow developer, that's for sure.
dstone:
Nice, looks like a four cam setup? One each on stage left and stage right and two in the back center? Would love to know what video switcher was used.
Technical production on these kinds of events are always the most fun. I've been studying broadcast production at my university, seems they want everyone to go into news or post production work. I've been technical director for a number of newscasts for the university, gets boring after a while. But live field production, that's where the fun's at.
desocietas:
Nice, looks like a four cam setup? One each on stage left and stage right and two in the back center? Would love to know what video switcher was used.
Technical production on these kinds of events are always the most fun. I've been studying broadcast production at my university, seems they want everyone to go into news or post production work. I've been technical director for a number of newscasts for the university, gets boring after a while. But live field production, that's where the fun's at.
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Hehe, I'll check with the boyfriend. I think he may have been the lead projectionist, sitting right behind that center circular screen. He's always talking about switchers and stuff and I always have a hard time keeping up... It was neat seeing how things look from behind the curtain - it's like figuring out how a magic trick works.
dstone:
Hehe, I'll check with the boyfriend. I think he may have been the lead projectionist, sitting right behind that center circular screen. He's always talking about switchers and stuff and I always have a hard time keeping up... It was neat seeing how things look from behind the curtain - it's like figuring out how a magic trick works.
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Lol, once I got behind the curtain I never wanted to come back out. It's always fun seeing the new kids come in and freak out over the number of buttons and sliders and such on the little 24 channel audio mixer. Then they really freak over the video switcher (24 inputs with three mix effects buses). It just looks complicated. We're always making jokes about firing the Death Star laser (they used a Grass Valley 1600 as the firing controls in the film).
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