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Frank Hegyi

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Posts posted by Frank Hegyi

  1. Sometimes stuff will start to look like that when you "push it too hard" in the color grade. Like if I saw this footage in something, I would assume they were trying to grade H.264 files. Like David said, something is getting getting clipped or something at some point in the chain. 

    Are you working with the original Prores files? 

  2. You probably already figured this all out, but the DJI RS2 gimbal is a great match with this camera. I've found that when shooting architecture, it's easier to just use the gimbal instead of a slider. You can get basically the same shots with 1/10 of the setup time. 

    I don't use a cage with my c70. The stock top handle is actually pretty nice. Plus, any cage you put on it will probably make it a little too wide to easily balance on an RS2. 

    I haven't found the build in LCD to be bright enough to easily use outdoors. But neither is the shinobi. You should look into a high bright monitor, maybe a portkeys BM5. The other option is a simple sun shade for the built in screen. That should get you close. Also, make sure to go into the settings and set "LCD backlight" (or something like that) to +2. The default setting is much to dim to use outdoors. 

  3. Hi all, I just wanted to chime in and say that I went through the same thing a few months ago. I thought something was wrong, but turns out the noise floor is just kinda high. It's the same on both my C300mkiii and C70. It's confusing because canon calibrated their audio pots to be basically unusable beyond 4 or 5 on the dial. It seems like something is broken, but it's not. Ultimately, I haven't found it to be an issue. But yeah, I wouldn't try to run dynamic mics or anything that outputs a weak signal. 

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  4. 1 hour ago, Larry Stone said:

    I think those of you in the industry can start recommending people and building a more diverse crew.

    You're missing my point. The personal recommendation system IS the problem. You gotta change the structure. Focusing on symptoms like the demographic breakdowns won't get you anywhere.

    Here, I'll give you another structural example: PA's get paid straight-up poverty wages. You gotta have some kind of subsidized existence for at least 12 months in order to break into the freelance production world. I wonder why we have demographic issues????

  5. 2 hours ago, Tyler Purcell said:

    This guy is currently the most successful documentary filmmaker in the US when you count the amount of money his books and films have made.

    Wow, I honestly had no idea his movies made that much money. That's quite the racket he's got goin' there.

    Obama's America: $33.4 million

    America: Imagine the World Without Her: $14.4 million

    Hillary's America: The Secret History of the Democratic Party : 13.1 million

    Death of a Nation: Can We Save America a Second Time?: $5.3 million

  6. That guy, Dinesh D Sousza is a goofy propagandist. I wouldn't take him too seriously. He's been doing those movies for years, but no one ever pays attention. But yes, there are tons of these kinds of "documentaries." I also love the trend of famous people/companies producing documentaries about themselves. The Netflix Fyre Festival documentary was PRODUCED by F-Jerry, the advertising company who helped organize the festival! I'm pretty sure the Justin Bieber doc on netflix was paid for by his label. I could come up with a bunch of examples. They're easy to spot. Any time the storyline is: famous-person-has-interesting-life-isn't-that-interesting, it was probably paid for by the subject.

    There was a lot of innovative stuff happening in short-form-documentaries like 10 years ago, but that format has been completely co-opted by advertising. It's starting to happen with long form stuff as well. It's gotten to the point where if your documentary looks too slick or has any slow-motion b-roll at all, I immediately think it's a commercial. 

  7. I see a lot of people in this thread saying that society has to choose between:

    1. Stopping work and bankrupting everyone on earth who lives paycheck to paycheck.

    2. Continuing to work, letting the virus run its course, and killing untold millions of additional people. 

    There is a third option, temporary socialism. All we have to do is briefly suspend what we typically believe to be "fair" in a capitalist system. In America that would entail drastic war-time-style government action:

    1. Medicare for all during the crisis. People have to feel safe going to the hospital without the fear of a lifetime of medical debt.

    2a. Open up the maximum unemployment benefits to everyone. Everyone outside of the government's defined "critical industries" are going to unemployed for months on end. $400/week in unemployment benefits would act as a temporary universal basic income. That would let people continue to pay their bills while staying home, and they wouldn't feel like they have to choose between bankruptcy and spreading the virus.

    2b. People employed in "critical industries" need an immediate doubling of their salaries for hazard pay, plus universal 2 weeks of sick leave. That's pretty self explanatory. People have to stay home if they're sick.

    3. Suspend all rent payments, mortgages, property taxes, and associated interest accrual. Land ownership adds no economic benefit to society, yet it's the #1 expense for the vast majority of people. The land owners will still own the land after the crisis is done. Right now, we can no longer afford to pay them.

    If you don't think we can afford to do all this, consider this. Jeff Bezos's PERSONAL fortune could pay a $400/week universal basic income to every adult in California for 3 months. Confiscate the obscene personal fortunes of America's billionaires, add that to the yearly budget of the pentagon, tweak the numbers until it all adds up, and all of a sudden we can easily tackle coronavirus.

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  8. 7 hours ago, Phil Rhodes said:

    I find it richly ironic that she says, in conclusion, that in America, healthcare is not about how much money you have.

    The pitchforks are going to come out once the insurance companies start sending bills to people. This is going to be the straw that broke the camel's back for America's "market-based" healthcare system.

  9. Be careful not to downplay the risk to young people. Yes, it's worse the older you are, but I personally know two people in their 20's who got it and ended up in the hospital. They're not going to die, but pneumonia is no fun. If the hospitals were full right now, they would both be dead.

    I worked at Harvard Med School for a long time and sat in on plenty of epidemiology classes. There's a reason doctors sound like "alarmists" on this. Our healthcare system is not capable of handling a pandemic. We're hyper-vulnerable to spikes in demand. And we're hyper-vulnerable to disruptions to the global supply chain. We already can't get the chemicals we need for testing, and we've only just begun.

    The emergency measures that governments are putting in place will save a lot of people, but it's not going to be enough. The poop has not yet hit the fan.

    But remember, everything is a sliding scale. It sounds stupid, but every hand you don't shake could be saving a life. Seriously.

    • Like 2
  10. I just don't see how we're all supposed to sit at home and twiddle our thumbs for the rest of the year without getting paid. No one's gonna be able to pay any bills. I guess some people are lucky to have savings or cushy remote office jobs, but everyone else is screwed.

    The foundation of capitalism has always been an implicit threat that if you stop working you'll starve to death on the sidewalk, but this is different. I'm already hearing stories about supermarket cashiers working while they cough their lungs out because they can't afford to skip a paycheck. It's barbaric.

    The inequalities of modern society are about to become so stark that when the bodies start stacking up outside the hospitals, the pitchforks might come out, for real. 

    36 months from now, I have no idea what the world is going to look like. 

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  11. Have YOU ever found yourself in this situation?!?!? It's the end of the day. You have a bluetooth speaker, but you don't know what to play while everyone's loading out. You'd play your favorite album, but it's either a weird genre, NSFW, too depressing, etc. You could play a non-descript spotify playlist, but you still have to pick a genre and there's no way to please everyone. 

    I have the solution: The Karaoke Hall of Fame. I've spent the last 2 months compiling an exhaustive list of the 200 most delightful hits of all time (aka songs that will get the bar excited on a karaoke night). Each song is guaranteed to elicit one of two reactions. Either, "Good song!" or "OMG this freaking song." 

    This is my gift to you, my fellow cinematography.com forum members. Shuffle and enjoy. 

    https://open.spotify.com/playlist/4DByq8kyqiHcr5vr3e7nrg?si=a3mdrGbrRVCJYb9cXiz4nw

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