Saturday, December 01, 2007

Acronyms


A few weeks ago a fellow PA (production assistant) at DS (Discovery Studios) had set me up with an AP (associate producer) of a local production house. This particular production house does a lot of shoots with Natgeo (National Geographic Channel), the ASAA (American Sleep Apnea Association), nonprofit groups, and lots of corporate video. This shoot that I'd been solicited for was for the ASAA. The video we were to make was about a man who has sleep apnea and how it can affect him in different situations. Thus when I was summoned to be a PA for the first shoot, I figured the shoot would be rather mundane, seeing as how it involved sleep.

I conferred with my producer at DS, Wayne, about whether it was worth it or not to skip out a day of copying DVDs for my internship and go out on a field shoot in a million dollar art studio home in one of the wealthiest neighborhoods in Maryland and get actual hands on experience.
The decision was a tough one, but after an immediate decision on Wayne's part telling me to go, I decided, immediately, to pursuit this venture.

Thus on the tuesday before Thanksgiving I awoke at 6am, put on jeans and a black polo (standard attire for a PA) and shortly thereafter drove to the set. Now, I've PA'd before on certain gigs in Lansing, Detroit, Washington DC, and NYC, and I'd have to say that none of them have been less than a genuine learning experience. In Lansing I PA'd for a children's film festival training day attended by all of 5 eager kids. In Detroit I've shot (twice now!) an Indian dance show with an audience of thousands of NRI's (Non Resident Indians) and straight of the boat-ers donning turbans, eating massive amounts of curry, and being some of the most hospitable people I've ever encountered. In DC I've helped out on Puppy Bowl, which, if you're new to the world of Jeff Allen, is Animal Planet's spinoff of professional football (almost like the XFL, but not quite...). NYC PAing was the home to Doctor Oz, Bodies Exhibit's and NY Bagels.

The American Sleep Apnea Association, though a fairly large organization, did not strike me as being terribly exciting, but as always, I'm up for anything.

I arrive at the Maryland mansion (not to be confused with Maryln Manson), walk into the thick oak doors of the house, and enter an artists paradise.

Enter the part of the post where I should, for the sake of the viewer, post pictures of this so called artist's paradise. Unfortunately I did not have my camera that day. So just imagine a household that Picasso would have hung the paintings, Frank Lloyd Wright would have been the architect, Salvador Dali would have been the inspiration for the sculptures and color scheme, Liberace would have been proud to have called the musical insturments his own, and Babe Ruth would have hung out in the sports room with his and his 100 pro friends' rookie cards.

Monday, November 05, 2007

NAVY

Two weekends ago I took the long and treacherous road down to Virginia Beach to visit my longtime friend and former-co-boat-owner, Adam King. The main road from Washington DC area going South to VA is I95. It should be call I9.5 if we're talking speed limits. What google maps told me would be a 3 hour trip turned into a 5 hour parking lot extravaganza. Luckily I had the new Foo Fighters CD to accompany me (thanks baby!) and lots and lots of abhorring VA drivers. After passing through the Bridge Tunnel that stretches across the Chesapeake I arrived on the Virginia Beach side of the eastern coast of the state. Adam lives in a house relatively close to the OCEANA NAS base where he plays Navy...is in the Navy, sorry.
Adam is an Aircraft engineer of sorts and he works on the ejection seat systems and the environmental control areas of the F18 Superhornets. The planes are made out of a composite, mainly plastic based, but renders them extremely tough and durable, kind of like hundreds of layers of seatbelts stretched out and compiled into a multi-million dollar fighting machine.There's not a flat surface on the jet; every square inch has a slight curve to it which helps to evade radar.
Unfortunately Adam took it a little too far and turned the beast on unbeknownst to me. Luckily I work at Discovery channel where I learned the best way to evade a jet engine, which is screaming.


Adam's squadron is the Jolly Rogers, and apparently they have won more awards and achievements in things like safety, efficiency, and best squadron numerous times. How could you not with such a mascot?

Monday, October 29, 2007

More Discovery


I figured it was time to upload some more pictures of whats been happening at Discovery in the past couple weeks. This one above is inside the Discovery Creative and Technology Center, or DCTC. In this location, many of the the various discovery shows are edited in Post-Production. Tapes are stored and logged here, the building has its own insert stage (kind of a compact studio), and over 50 edit suites are housed, all within this building.

Probably the most exciting thing I've done here in the past weeks was shoot a segment for animal planet, Puppy Bowl, which I touched on in an earlier post. I've attached this video of an insiders look into PB. You'll find how awkwardly silent it is. The scene being filmed is the Kitten Halftime show, another show highlight, and personal favorite.
The cats, in my eyes, looked either irritated, slightly scared, or just downright confused. But take special note at how meticulous each person is behind the scenes. The video is almost dead quiet.

The lighting people, my buddy Phil being one of them, wrench their arms back and forth while operating the spotlights. The camera operators shoot with care and precision. The grips standby at a moments notice to jump in and aid. You'd think these people were filming an Opera. It was really a cool moment, and the whole shoot was a great experience.

Tuesday, October 23, 2007

Puppy Bowl

His name is Justin, and he's single, cute, and available. I recently attended an Animal Planet shoot entitled "Puppy Bowl". Now, for those of you who are out of the know, "Puppy Bowl" is one of Animal Planet's widest watched programs of the year. It airs concurrently during the superbowl.... a bold idea when one considers the amount superbowl ads cost each year, (the more people watching i.e. ratings, the more the network can charge for ad spots.)

I showed up on monday morning not knowing really what to expect. My producer had just told me that I was going to be a PA (production assistant), which usually involves anything from helping out on set, lighting, changing batteries, giving various input, to what I ended up doing, shooting a scene by myself.

Sunday, October 07, 2007

Videos!


I wandered around The Taste of Bethesda!
on saturday and there was this great latin band playing
great salsa music. Most of the players were from equador.
Check out the gringo dancing at the end!

Now accepting reservations!

Come see me! I would love to show you around the DMV, there is a ton of stuff to do and lots of cool places to see, so friends and family, let me know a weekend you can come out and we'll go from there!

Congestion and the American Dream


It never ceases to amaze me how things come in pairs.

Today I made a last minute trip down the Capitol Beltway to watch a bout between our very talented Detroit Lions and the Washington Redskins ( a game time decision, as it were!) However, I think you'll find the game itself is the least interesting part of this story. The drive from my house in Kensington to Fed Ex Stadium in Prince Georges County is 18.6 miles according to google maps, so over an hour on the beltway....

Like at any modern massive sporting event, or anywhere around the DMV, parking is damn nightmare. As I pulled off of the beltway, it was about 1:30, (left just after noon) and the game was already underway. I pulled into the vast expanse of permit parking lots, all appropriately sorted by color. Many scalpers littered the area and try to flag you down to sell off their remaining tickets. Thus begins the haggle.
Now for those of you who don't know, I immensely enjoy the haggling process. I believe this fetish started when I was in Rome for WYD 2000. I would haggle street vendors just for the thrill of trying to get the lowest price, never intending to purchase what they were selling. I would haggle tshirt sellers to flower vendors, trying to drop prices from 2 dollars to one. My first big haggle was for a plate of the Colleseum. The vendor started the price off at 100 american dollars. As soon as I expressed an interest in the piece, the vendor was hooked, trying anything to sell off the plate too me. We started going back and forth, he'd ask what I wanted to spend, I'd say I wasn't sure, he'd throw out lower prices, I'd say still too steep. Eventually his lowest price leveled off at 50 American. Not wanting to drop a half Benji on this plate, I utilized my trump card of haggling technique, and simply walked away. It took about 15 seconds until the man chased me down, plate in hand.
I bought the piece for 15 dollars.

Thus the sight of scalpers ignited my senses, and I pulled off to one man waving me down. I rolled down the window and asked what he had. He had multiple tickets all over the stadium, starting at 80 dollars. The game was already a half hour or so underway, so I told him his prices were a little steep and asked what I wanted to spend. I said no more than twenty. He dropped to forty. I started to pull away. He held onto my window, saying twenty was ok, he could do twenty. Strategically, I had only ten dollars in my wallet, and upon opening it and showing him my funds I said sorry, I actually only had ten. He said ten was fine, he could do ten. He dropped the ticket on my seat and I handed him two fives.

So I was off! ticket in hand I just needed a parking spot. It turns out you must also buy a parking pass from the scalpers as well, as I found out from a parking attendant. So I pulled over to the next nearest scalper. He was only selling tickets and parking passes in pairs, thus no use to me. On to the next scalper. He had one starting at 60 in the red lot ( about 20 min walk to the stadium). I said way to pricy, he dropped to 40. I told him I had no more cash, to which he replied, " Nigga watchyou gone do with no cash!" and walked off.

My friend was absolutely correct, so I sped off in search of a spot in the nearest residential neighbor hood. Now like many neighbor hoods around the DMV, even to park in the street requires a parking permit. Seeing as how I do not live in Prince Georges county, I lacked this pass. I drove and drove, passing houses that quickly started to dimish in value, passing a police station, passing project houses, and landing at a neighborhood that appeared not to have a street sign designated spots of pavement reserved for cars with permits. I parallel parked the lumina, hid my valuables, and walked to the stadium.

A half hour later I arrived at Fed Ex Stadium.
The stadium is a massive three story structure, home to escalators, corporate boxes, Budwieser, Miller light, scantily clad cheerleaders, and thousands upon thousands of Redskins fans, or as I like to call them, raging misplaced pirates.
Redskins fans should be the Webster's dictionary entry for the phrase "out of control". Like so many east coasters where football comes first, these fans live for Sundays. My ticket was in the "12th man: Stomp With Pride!" section. I was flanked by couples paired with jersey's and budweisers to my left and a group of 12th Man stompers paired with tatoo's and miller lights. When the Redskins make a first down, the section blows up. Fans start chants like "You Suck, You Suck!", "Bullsh@t! Bullsh@t!" and my personal favorite, "F### Detroit!"

Needless to say, the fans of Washington were rewared for their passions with a blowout victory. The Lions were 3-1 going into this game, but after this disgusting loss, their record drops to a shameful 3-100000.
But enough about a this collective scream fest, back to my car, if it's still there. The walk back took me past Prince Georges County highschool, which is directly outside the stadium, Jericho Baptist Church, also right next to the stadium, and loads beyond loads of cars and pavement. eventually I reached the residential neighborhood where my car was. I saw multiple cars with tickets on their windshields, so I was expecting the worst. As the house values diminished I knew I was getting close to my car. Up and down a few hills, passing children playing football in the streets, various baptist churches here and there, a police station to my right, a project house to my left. I began to feel stares from people on the street, mostly out of curiousity I presume. After the 5th block of project houses, I was almost to my car when an undercover police car pulled over to the side of the road and turned on his flashers. I stopped walking as the officer rolled down his windshield to speak to me. "Hey, are you lost?" he questioned me. I quickly replied "No, just walking to my car." He turned his head toward where I was walking and then back to me. "In this neighborhood?" he rebutted. It was then that I noticed that I was the only white person I'd seen in blocks, except for this officer. I looked around me for a quick second and gave him a shrug. "Yeah." The officer gave me a quick once over glance, as if to remind me that I was sticking out like a sore thumb, responded, "Ok." and sped off. I reached my car, the pair of us unscathed, and headed off to the Beltway for an hour and a half drive back.

Prince Georges County is one of the poorest counties around this area and notorious for being dangerous. Low-income housing, close quarters, and beat up cars lay only a short walk from the loaded corporate stage at Fed Ex Field. Its an interesting duality. How can these two separate entities exist within blocks of each other? It reminds me of crossing over into Detroit from Oakland county. The neighborhood where I parked my car drew memories of Nicaraguan streets in parts, where houses have iron doors, cars old and new are parked on lawns and behind houses, and the kids play in the playground that is the street. Yet practically next door is a beacon of cleanliness and hope. The dream of becoming famous, of being on the field, having thousands cheer for you, the hope of escaping your birthright caste. For one day a week, people from these poor neighborhoods travel up the hill to the stadium to cheer on their team, but really its more deep than that. At the heart of watching spectator sports is a hint of vicarious illusions, the thought that, maybe some day it could be me on that field, or me on that jumboscreen, or me winning that camera given to the person in section 223, row 22 seat 2. Could this be possibly the heart of the American Dream? Give me my 15 minutes?

To quote Hunter S. Thompson,
For every moment of triumph, for every instance of beauty, many souls must be trampled.

Saturday, September 29, 2007

1st Week


Is outta the WAY! WELCOME to the lobby of Discovery Headquarters. Greeting you is a giant caste of a TRex, made from an actual TRex bones at some major University.
Next to him is his little friend Mr. Triceratops Head (I hope I have my dino spellings right.)
This lobby is like a mini
Curious Kids Museum. Along with
the two dinosaurs, there is a
display of the Discovery USA Biking team, for the tour de France, featuring an actual bike, jersey, rider profiles and photos, the handmade chopper (motorcycle) by Paul Teutel Sr., and a humongous mechanical gizmo that is hard to describe. I'll have to get a picture of this contraption, but basically this thing transports little wood, ping pong sized balls up a twisting column an sends them down random paths to the bottom, traversing through hundreds of different tracks, doors, springs, jumps, etc...
This photo is in front of the main entrance to the headquarters. You can actually see the Discovery building from the Red line train which gets off in downtown Silver Spring..This is one of three buildings Discovery has in the D.C. area. I actually don't work in this building, but I did have orientation there on my first day. The building is only about 6 or 7 years old, so it's super new and hip cool ( such was the description via our intern coordinator.) It actually is amazing. Walking through the building you feel like you're in some posh Clubhouse for an upscale esoteric organization. The first floor boasts 2 cafe-like areas, electric scooters, and a full service wellness center. Yes you can wander out of the onsite coffee shop with your morning headache and stumble next door into the wellness center for medical diagnosis and treatment. Apparently Discovery is one of the Top 100 Fortune 500 places to work, and a 2007 Working Mother Best Company for Working Mothers, I'm assuming a lot of that had to do with our Day care service (and plans are in progress for a huge playground for the kids in the courtyard of the building). Yes this is big place, and the whole building is "green", meaning lots of CFL's, recycling bins, and my personal favorite, nonflush toilets ( a water saver....think about it.)
Discovery's second building is called the Discovery Creative and Technical Center, located about 4 blocks south of the headquarters. About half the size as HQ, this building is still ginormous. It features over 50 professional editing suites, each suited with 2 monitors, plasma screen tv for preview, computers, and thousands of dollars in editing equipment, another cafe, full time deli workers (my Latino amigos!) , and an escalator (apparently just to look cool).

Of course I do not work in any of these corporate paradises. The last location is located on the 8th and 9th floors of the Bethesda Towers, in Downtown Bethesda, MD (about 10 minutes from Silver Spring.) Parking is 8 dollars a day, the building is loaded with personal security guards, and of course, non flush toilets. I work in this building with my fellow Discovery Production Studios Co-workers. I have my own cubicle, computer, phone and extension, and age group (yes everyone is at least 10 years older than me.)

Well I need to go take more pictures of the DMV. Next might be some DC pictures.

CIAO!

Wednesday, September 19, 2007

The New Place!

Pictures of the new place in Maryland.... that's right Maryland.






Here's my street, nice and green, with the Lume parked right out front.


The main room connects into the kitchen with a swivel door and that little window.

The kitchen was trashed when I moved in, apparently one of my new housemates, Matt, is quite the bachelor.

It took about 22 hrs for me to give up and clean out a space for myself.

The rest of his stuff is on an adjacent counter, waiting....

Needless to say, I was a little spoiled living with Jon.

Here's my room, actually quite large. It connects into my private bathroom, which is two parts.

The Sink area is the bigger part, and also part-time desk.

I presently don't have a place for my computer and since the sink area was so huge, it's filling in.

My Tub/Shower and Toilet area are also fairly large.
I like the wood paneling in the bathroom.

It gives the place a kind of cabin feel.


I've got a ceiling fan in my room, 2 decent sized closets, and two entrances.

You can see the view from inside the shower room to out through the sink area and my bed is peeking out of the main room.


I've yet to meet this elusive Matt... He lives in the Basement in a really large room, completely trashed.

I did meet my neighbor upstairs, Steve. Steve works in Computers, is from PA, has a wife and kids, and travels home on the weekends.

During the week Steve leaves at about 7 to catch the Metro into DC and gets back 12 hrs later to go to bed.

I figured I'd put his computer skills to the test and made him help me connect to the internet.

Around my area there are tons of shops and restaurants.


Target, JC Penny's, Giant, Qdoba, Starbucks, Safeway, Starbucks,
and Starbucks are all within a 15min or so walking distance.
They love their coffee out here.

I'm going to keep organizing stuff, but sometime soon I'll post some pictures of the city and where I'll be working.
Adios!

Thursday, September 13, 2007

Vegas

Is insane.....