Friday, June 22, 2007
Making the video...
The video was shot in two sessions of about 35 minutes each over two days. The first session consisted of the scenes with me at the front of the class room. Shooting was done with a Sony Hi-8 Digital Camcorder set upon a tripod. Each scene was shot twice so that the best take of each could be used. There was some concern that the audio level was too low so I made an attempt to speak louder in the second take.
Ambient room lighting (florescent) was used (although I toyed with the idea of supplementing it with additional lights).
I had originally intended to write the intro text onto the white board, but the marker didn’t really appear well on the video. I was able to get it to be visible by writing thicker, but this wouldn’t lend itself to the appearance of casual writing on the board. So, I switched instead to showing static text.
All the editing was done using Windows XP Movie Maker. The video was transferred via firewire to my PC in the highest quality digital mode. Transitions between scenes were easily added. The trickiest scene was the ghost class. This involved overlaying an image of the empty classroom over the video of the class. Movie Maker doesn’t natively support this, but you can trick it into doing so by creating a title overlay with blank text and a PNG image with a certain level of transparency. I took a snap within Movie Maker of the empty classroom and used this to generate the PNG image with about 50% transparency.
The final scene where I vanish into thin air was a simple matter of using the dissolve transition from the scene with me in it to the empty scene. I used a still image (again captured in Movie Maker) rather than a video so that I could have better control over the duration.
Finally I faded the video to black. This had to be done quickly but I wanted to include it as I know that YouTube has a tendency to clip the final second or so.
Once I had all the scenes in place, I needed to do some tweaking to get the total running time down to 45 seconds. This was more difficult that I expected and in the end I had to shorten the intro text to a shorter time than I would have liked (I think the impact of the text is lost a bit).
The audio of the video was processed separately by first recording the camcorder audio from my scenes at the front of the classroom along with the one scene where the class is visible. I used Cool Edit 2000 to capture the audio as it played in Movie Maker. I then spent a little time boosting it and removing the camera noise (using a neat feature in Cool Edit that allows creating filters from sound samples). Next, I added in the audio from the class (when they aren’t on screen). And then I recorded the final moan (the original was pretty wimpy) which I put through a reverb filter.
I now had the complete audio for the video which I used to replace the original audio in Movie Maker. I had to experiment a bit to get it synchronized with the video and I never did get it perfect, but it was close enough.
My entry into the contest...
I’m not sure exactly when I first heard about the careerbuilder.com dream job contest. Perhaps it was on Ricky Birgante’s Inside the Magic Podcast. But I first seriously considered it after hearing it on the official
The idea I came up with was to present myself as a ghost instructor teaching a class of the newly departed in the hopes that they could take on the role of the 1000th ghost in the
At this point, I didn’t discuss the contest with anyone. I enjoyed the exercise of writing the screen play and I thought it was half way decent. But I knew that unless I got support from others, the idea would remain just that. So I decided to share my idea with my wife, Laura. I figured that if she thought the idea was good, she would push me to carry through and actually make the video a reality. When I read her the script, her reaction was positive and as I had hoped, she encouraged me to do it. Then she asked how far off the deadline was… a little less than two weeks.
