Showing posts with label podcast. Show all posts
Showing posts with label podcast. Show all posts

Sunday, May 8, 2011

On The Set of Movies You May Have Missed 2.0

MYMHM - Setting up audio and video to get the gig done...As you may or may not know, in addition to directing voice over sessions, I also produce a little web series movie review show called "Movies You May Have Missed". We've been on hiatus for a while prepping what we hope will be version 2.0 of our show.

I was able to snap a few pics of the process, camera, studio, audio kit, and you can see the whole gallery on my Smugmug account.

If you're interested in checking out some films that may have passed you by, or if you have recommendations for films you love that NONE of your friends have seen, check us out at http://MYMHM.tv

Monday, May 4, 2009

Introducing Movies You May Have Missed!

I'm proud to introduce you to a new project my pal Lee and I are undertaking.

Movies You May Have Missed! 

Here's a quick teaser we just cobbled together:

Monday, November 10, 2008

The Daily Renita Casting Podcast is LIVE Today!

News from my pal Chris Emerson over at PlanetEmerson.com, The Daily Renita Podcast is up and ready for your podcast consumption.
Renita (of Renita Casting, and a narration voice actress) is setting up five minute daily audio episodes to answer questions on the world of casting. Very helpful stuff for you actors looking to get a leg up, and very motivational to boot!
My pal Chris is hosting!

Here's their take on the show:
Five-minute MP3 audio lessons delivered directly to you daily from premiere casting director, producer, and director Renita. Listen as she keeps you up-to-date in today's world of acting, commercials, the casting process, the art of filmmaking, and the minute-by-minute changes occurring in the industry.

Download, listen, and learn from Renita on your way to auditions, interviews and bookings. Equip yourself with the industry insider information, audition techniques, and casting secrets which separate the highly-paid always-working actors from the rest.
     

"If I call you in for an audition, I want you to win. It does not behoove me for you not to rock that audition."
-- Renita

Wednesday, August 20, 2008

Give Your Brain That "So Fresh and So Clean Clean" Feeling

My last Audio Guy Mail Bag question was so ... interesting ... I had to trade a couple emails back and forth with the author of the question, Mer.
Turns out she's hosting a podcast, and I'm kinda smitten with it.
"Fun" name notwithstanding, BrainDouche.net is a charming storytelling podcast. Mer has a very comfortable delivery, and some silly fun "left field" observations on life. It's very appropriate that she brought up Ira Glass in her question to me, as her first episode is one of the most engaging stories I've heard in a while. Mostly because it's so simple.

That she's so new to producing her own content, I was surprised at how well her individual episodes have come together. She's got a great ear for timing, and her music choices are pretty stellar.

Having just recently gotten into The Moth Storytelling Podcast, BrainDouche is a really good compliment. So good, in fact, I kinda had to add it to my little list of cool sites on the right.

It's a lot of fun, and I think you should check it out.

BrainDouche.net

Friday, August 15, 2008

Awesome Narration Find: The Moth - Real Stories Told by Real People

I've just recently been turned onto The Moth - Live Storytelling Performances.

Basically it's a live storytelling slam in NY and LA, where people meet to tell each other stories about their lives.
I've been subscribed to the podcast for a little while now (while also trolling through their archives), and it's pretty great stuff.

People can be really interesting, and listening to folks share can be funny, silly, sad,infuriating, heartbreaking, and sometimes all of those at the same time.

For example here's Dr. Ari Handel talking about how he kinda fell in love with the first monkey he had to experiment on (he studied Neuroscience):


This is some of the most deeply personal and satisfying performance I've ever heard, and I highly recommend signing up for their podcast.

The Moth RSS Feed The Moth on iTunes

Here's more on The Moth (in their own words):

What is The Moth?

The Moth, a not-for-profit storytelling organization, was founded in New York in 1997 by poet and novelist George Dawes Green, who wanted to recreate in New York the feeling of sultry summer evenings on his native St. Simon's Island, Georgia, where he and a small circle of friends would gather to spin spellbinding tales on his friend Wanda's porch. After moving to New York, George missed the sense of connection he had felt sharing stories with his friends back home, and he decided to invite a few friends over to his New York apartment to tell and hear stories. Thus the first "Moth" evening took place in his living room. Word of these captivating story nights quickly spread, and The Moth moved to bigger venues in New York. Today, The Moth conducts six ongoing programs and has brought more than 3,000 live stories to over 100,000 audience members.

Why "The Moth"?

The screen around Wanda's porch had a hole where moths would flutter in and get trapped in the light. Similarly, George and his friends found that the characters in their best stories would often find themselves drawn to some bright light—of adventure, ambition, knowledge—but then find themselves burned or trapped, leaving them with some essential conflict to face before the story could reach its conclusion. So George and his original group of storytellers called themselves "The Moths". George took the name with him to New York, where he hoped that New Yorkers, too, would find themselves drawn to storytelling as moths to a flame. They did. With no advertising, through sheer word of mouth, every show to date has sold out in 48 hours or less.

Thanks Uncle Bob!

Sunday, March 30, 2008

I just got invitedto the ODEO Beta! Woot!

Back in the day Odeo was the premier podcasting service.

Or at least it was MY favorite to use.



Well, Sonic Mountain is bringing it back from the depths of internet obscurity (a bit much?).

They invited me into the beta, and I've been playing around with podcasts, and so far I like it. It's simple and clean, and seems to be up and moving quick.
I'm hoping to see some more social tools built in. I like being able to vote for good episodes, I'd like to see some more tagging for similar content, and right now there is no commenting on "pod shows".

All in all I like the new look, and I'd love to see this community back up and running.
some audio guy someaudioguy odeo podcasting podcasts beta website community voice over voice acting

Thursday, December 27, 2007

The REBOOT dedicates an entire episode to Game Audio

Hey this is a pretty good show! I've never seen this podcast before, but I think I'll be subscribing. Wonder if I can Miro it? ... hmmm ...

Anywho, a reader sent in this specific episode knowing my about my love of all things audio, and ... they also just happen to be one of the guys interviewed. LOL, I love my readers!

This entire episode of The Reboot is on video game audio, it's development, and evolution into a more cinematic form, so check it out. It's pretty cool.




Thanks David!

Wednesday, December 26, 2007

News Sound Bites - Whole ton-o-stuff coming back from XMas

Yeah I gotta bunch, so lets jump in.

Jalopnik told me that Plantronics thinks you look stupid with that BT headset. Put it in the new Plantronics car charger when not in use.

Nokia's crushing on Apple, wants to make sweet music iTunes downloading babies.

Speakers = Sexy? AudioJunkies thinks so, has list of top 15 speaker sets with the curves to compete with your girlfriend.

Blizzard, your favorite WoW/Starcraft developers, are starting a podcast on game development.

In other BT Headset news, Engadget has the scoop on the Adtec AD-HSM10, one of tiniest headsets I've ever seen. I shall call it "the button" (instead of the nonsensical string of letters and numbers - Come on people! Consumers buy NAMES, they buy iPods and Zunes and ROKRs and Walkmans not "AD-HSM10's"! HOW DO YOU EVEN SAY THAT), and be mad that we'll probably never see it stateside.

FreewareGenius lets us know about Tunestor, a free Firefox plugin that automates downloading an mp3, and putting it right into iTunes. I don't use iTunes, so this is useless to me. I'm only writing about it for you, my faithful readers. I'm teh selfless!

Was my post about SpokenText not enough to sate the Text to Speech beast in you? DownloadSquad gives us another TtS to satisfy that "read it to me" urge.

Toon Zone interviews the original Speed Racer and Trixie!

ay-dee-ache-es-em-tenza ... nope still sucks... it's "the button" now ... I've decided!

Saturday, November 24, 2007

New episodes of Irrational Public Radio!


I've been bugging Joe about this for months and he's FINALLY gotten around to gracing us with some new episodes of IPR. If you're not familiar with IPR, it's a perfect send up of NPR, and it's really funny.

Here's a sample from the new full length CD (on sale now):






Here's IPR on MySpace.

And here's the official IPR website.

Thursday, October 11, 2007

NPR Podcast: "Video-Game Actors Seek a Bigger Share of Profits"

OK, I know the title is kinda "duh". Of COURSE performers are going to want a bigger share of profits, but NPR does a really decent job of explaining why.

When you examen the economies involved on video gaming, it's getting harder to deny that actors should receive either a better buy out or some small residual pool.

I know it's an extreme example of success, but Halo 3's sales are indicative of where "block buster" money is going (since it's not going to movie studios).
*First Day estimates of $170 Million (Spiderman 3 did 150 it's opening WEEKEND).
*First Week Sales of $300 Million (or roughly three times the total box office).
*Drove console sales, resulting in an average doubling of XBox 360's sold week over week.
*Estimated 4500 years of man-hours spent on XBox Live.

So what did the actors get paid?
Well outside of those on the IMDB page for H3, most likely some derivative of scale.
Best case being maybe 3x scale, or about $2100 per four hour recording session, and I doubt that many were paid that well.

And that's it. Nothing else.

One of the big arguments against residuals is risk. Game producers are never guaranteed revenue, and with budgets now approaching and exceeding movie budgets, it can be a scary proposition to put out a game that people might not buy. Production also claims that there wont be additional revenues like movies have (from theatrical, to cable, to DVD, etc).

Fair enough, but I think games do enjoy additional revenues. They're all just game related. Halo 3 is currently a $60 game exclusive on the XBox 360. If MS is smart they'll cut prices on the game around the same time as a big PS3 game comes out (so we should see a brief surge). Next we should see a three game special edition box set with all of the Halo games, so we can re-buy all of that content. After a couple months the game should be ported to Windows PC's, where we'll see another small market surge for the game. So, even if Halo 3 had a $100 million production budget, it was already into profit territory in the first day, and we'll probably see about a year's worth of sales.

I mean even the Wii will play old original Nintendo games at about $5 a pop, so I'm not sure how that's not additional revenues...

Now to be fair, Halo 3 is the exception not the rule. Halo was also made by Bungie, which is owned by Microsoft (well not any more, but at the time), so all of that profit is probably being rolled back into the fact that MS sells it's console at a loss (as does Sony, but not Nintendo).
However, all that being said, I still feel like there is some room to start including baby-step residuals into these contracts. Why not set up the pool after production costs have been met? Basically anything to further reward products that do well, which would attract more talent, probably improve the product, sell more games, attract more talent, etc, etc, etc.

Anywho, here's the link to NPR's story. Give it a listen.

MAN, that was A LOT of typing...


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Thursday, October 4, 2007

SomeAudioGuy Reads you a Poem, a ROMANTIC Poem!


Maybe some day I'll record something that isn't Poe...

Who knows?

It COULD happen...

Anywho, here's 'To Helen (ii)' by E.A. Poe. Enjoy!



And keep an eye (ear?) out for some original work soon from the mysterious "PoetryGirl". It's pretty exciting stuff!!!

Sunday, August 12, 2007

The Monkey Box!!! Check out this podcast! Do it! Now!!!

Hey all,
Adding another link to the right hand side bar of sites to check out. I figured it was bout time I added something fun, no?

So here it is! THE MONKEY BOX!!! Deliciously absurdest sketch comedy. I've worked with Brian Chase and Byrne Offutt, and they're really funny guys, so check it out!




TheMonkeyBox.com

The Monkey Box Blog

And just for kicks, since I just picked up 300 on DVD, here's Bob and Byrne's short '298'!




Enjoy!

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Sunday, July 29, 2007

Why aren't you listening: The Onion Radio News

Just a quick write up here.

Trolling Digg, I stumbled upon a really quick and easy way to find all of The Onion's news bite podcasts. I'm really surprised that they aren't "Dugg" more.

Anywho, here's the Digg link to look them up. They're short, and really funny.