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Charlotte Mikkelborg is the series director of the Adventure series on Apple TV, which is shot on Apple Immersive Video and co-produced by Atlantic Studios (formerly Atlantic Productions) and Apple. I think it has the strongest storytelling released by Apple so far, and it also has some of the most innovative and cutting edge shots that really show the power of the 180-degree format of Apple Immersive Video. In this conversation, we cover Mikkelborg's 10-year journey into working with immersive formats starting with 360-degree video, multi-sensory VR, and most recently 180-degree video. We also talk about the emerging grammar of 180-degree filmmaking, and the introduction of close ups, which I feel like work sometimes and other times feels almost too close or can feel a bit uncanny or jarring when changing scales or results in warping or other distortions. We also talk about some of the behind-the-scenes insights about the Adventure series. One concerning thing that I noticed after watching all of the Apple Immersive Videos released so far is that many of these videos do not contain any credits for who worked on these projects. I did an audit of all 22 of the published Apple Immersive Videos, and I found that 14 of the 22 don't have any credits at all,. Most of these are by Apple Sentity LLC productions, which is presumably Apple's in-house production team. I found that 5 out of the 22 have partial credits, including the four episodes of the Adventure series as well as Man vs. Beast, which features DGA director Ryan Booth. And there are 3 out of the 22 Apple Immersive Videos that have full and complete credits including Submerged that features DGA director Edward Berger, and the Prehistoric Planet Immersive series, which is a co-production with Fairview Portals. See the table below for more information: It is deeply concerning to me that only 3 out of the 22 Apple Immersive Videos seemingly have full and complete credits. Apple did not provide any comment about why this is or why some of these pieces have no credits, why some have partial credits, and why some have full credits. It is nice to see at least some credits on the Adventure series, which is a co-production between Apple and Atlantic Studios (formerly Atlantic Productions), but they're only listing the director, executive producer, and key talent while all of the other key creative talent are not being credited. Atlantic Productions did not provide any official comment about why there are only partial credits, while a few other productions have full credits and many other productions have no credits. You can see find a partial a list of some of the Adventure series creative talent on IMDB, and episode 3 protagonist Ant Williams posted a partial list of credits on his Instagram announcement post. I was able to get some additional context from Mikkelborg about the credits situation, and it does sounds like the co-productions likely have a bit more leeway in dictating what types of credits are shown. While the Prehistoric Planet Immersive series co-produced by Fairview Portals series has full and complete credits, and the Adventure series by Atlantic Studios only has partial credits. The two Apple Sentity LLC productions that do have credits also happen to be directed by directors who are a part of the Director's Guild of America (DGA). The DGA has specific credits requirements, "For feature films, the Director's screen credit must be accorded on a separate card, which shall be the last title card appearing prior to principal photography. This credit shall be no less than 50% of the size of the displayed title of the motion picture, or of the largest size in which credit is accorded to any other person, whichever is greater." The rules may be different for immersive productions or emerging media projects, but the director credits for Submerged and Man vs Beast seem to both meet DGA's credits requirements for film.
In this episode, Phillip Gervasi and Ryan Booth dive into "vibe coding"—a new AI-assisted approach where LLMs generate code from natural language descriptions. Inspired by Andrej Karpathy's vision, vibe coding streamlines development but raises questions about debugging, best practices, and the future of software engineering.
➡️ Today we're chatting with Jay Morales, a filmmaker and photographer from The Bay State! He has a passion for telling real, authentic stories that foster a deep human connection. And according to him, the secret for creating emotional depth in filmmaking is simple—love, service and trust. Three elements that can even be found in his Favorite Frame™. ➡️ Check out this episode of the podcast on Youtube as well. ➡️ Come connect with us on social: Instagram, Twitter, Facebook and LinkedIn. ➡️ Enjoying the show? Feel free to leave us a review on Spotify and Apple Podcasts. ➡️ Today's show notes: Jay's website, https://thisisjmorales.com/ Jay's Vimeo, https://vimeo.com/jaymorales Southern Connecticut State University, https://www.southernct.edu/ ESPN, https://www.espn.com/ Spectrum NY1 News, https://ny1.com/nyc/all-boroughs TheBlaze TV (formerly GBTV), https://subscribe.blazetv.com/ Fox Business, https://www.foxbusiness.com/ Ron Brodie, https://ronbrodie.com/ Mike Latchman, https://www.linkedin.com/in/michael-latchman-80166416/ Ben's Story: Out of the Darkness, https://vimeo.com/249143425 The Life Church (formerly ExcelChurch), https://thelifechurchma.com/ Vimeo, https://vimeo.com/ Instagram, https://www.instagram.com/ Wesley Kabakjian, https://nycsteadicam.com/ Brandon Detraglia, https://www.imdb.com/name/nm7966611/ The Bail Project, https://vimeo.com/244729509 Hype Williams, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hype_Williams Belly, https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0158493/ Keeping It Stupid Simple with Matt Vojacek, https://youtu.be/d3nca0Q3D5Q Lucas Harger, https://www.imdb.com/name/nm6680441/ Ryan Booth, https://www.imdb.com/name/nm4722460/ Musicbed, https://www.musicbed.com/ Film Riot, https://www.filmriot.com/ EVERYBODY Has a Story to Tell with Sean Foster, https://youtu.be/F_yPTk81vqc — ➡️ Affiliate links: If you decide to make a purchase through one of our affiliate links we will get a small commission at no additional cost to you. Rest assured that we would recommend these products regardless of their commission-based opportunities. Riverside — ➡️ Theme Music: Late Night Latte by Harrison Amer. Licensed by Premiumbeat. ➡️ Styleframe Saturdays is a proud member of the Formerle brand family. Permissions granted by the artist. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/styleframesat/support
Explore how large language models (LLMs) like GPT and Llama are reshaping network operations. Ryan Booth joins Telemetry Now to discuss the practical applications of LLMs, from querying complex telemetry data to facilitating advanced analysis. Learn about current use cases—including natural language querying and automated workflows—and emerging trends like agentic AI for network automation. We also discuss challenges such as hallucinations and real-time data handling and offer some advice for integrating LLMs into your network operations today.
When I think of spiritual health, I think of pastors, clergy, rabbis, those who dedicate their lives to God and God's work. When I think of a Pastor who gets all of that on a level I can relate to, I think of Pastor Ryan Booth. He's lived a real life and is open in sharing how he found God in it. And I've got him on the podcast today! This episode is FULL of pearls of wisdom for spiritual health. From finding faith through crippling depression in his 20s to building a life around God's plans for him, Pastor Ryan shares what grew his path and how he pours into it every day in his real life. I really love the part about anxiety, the part about worry, and the part about honoring God's kingdom over his own. He even weighs in on the "developmental milestone" of the unraveling in a way that has me thinking... and you will, too. This episode is a must listen for anyone looking to start your journey toward spiritual health and take it all the way to peace you won't find anywhere else. If you'd like to take this work further, join us in the Fasting Flock, my FREE Facebook group for all things fasting and finding spiritual health in your realy life. Click here to join!
In this episode, Ryan Booth joins Telemetry Now to discuss Generative AI, Natural Language Processing, and Large Language Models. We dive into the history, components, and mechanisms of how LLMs work, how we can deal with hallucinations, and how AI can help improve IT operations.
Whether you're drowning in new leads or scraping the barrel for business, there's one process you can't ignore if you want to increase sales: how you qualify, and disqualify, your prospects. It's an area a lot of salespeople try to ‘wing', and their pipeline suffers the consequences. To learn how the best salespeople are qualifying their prospects, we sat down with Ryan Booth, vice president of sales at PSI Process and former US Army officer. He showed us exactly how to set ourselves up for success with every qualification conversation. It's all in this week's Bulletproof Selling Podcast!
Join our host Andy Addis with his friends and members of the 3-man teaching team for the rural multisite church called CrossPoint (crosspointchurch.com). Ryan Booth and Shaen Marks help discuss 2 Timothy 2:15 “Do your best to present yourself to God as one approved, a worker who has no need to be ashamed, rightly handling […]
Join our host Andy Addis with his friends and members of the 3-man teaching team for the rural multisite church called CrossPoint (crosspointchurch.com). Ryan Booth and Shaen Marks help discuss four myths that need busting regarding preaching! This is the first part of a two-part series. If you want to experience the pump-up jam Andy […]
In this episode of Pave it Black, we discuss the Sheldon G. Hayes Award with representatives from the latest company to be honored with the award. Richard and Brett talk with Scott Roe, Michael Terry, Derik Huber, and Ryan Booth of Kiewit Infrastructure South Co. about what it takes to win the highest award as well as what the award means to the company and its staff. The team shares how communication plays a critical role in achieving top quality projects as well as other areas they focus on while constructing asphalt pavements. Listen to learn how Kiewit uses project specific goals to create incentives for staff that help achieve the owners' requirements and bonuses on all of their projects while driving quality.
Nearly every one of these episodes has a *Recorded in 2020* as a disclaimer in the show notes. So - the obvious question: why in the world did it take so long to put these conversations out?? The short answer: I got stuck. And getting unstuck was a multi-step process. First, my friend Jake McMullen came alongside me and began editing the episodes and generating the original music. Anna Remus came along to help put a schedule to the process. And suddenly, the episodes were done and ready...except for all the intros/outros. I recorded a scripted version and it didn't feel right. But then I got stuck again. So in a flailing effort to get unstuck, I put out an IG message asking for someone to jump on a Zoom with me and simply be on the other end of the call while I tried to record the intros off the cuff. But it turned into something much more than intro/outro - it turned into a deep conversation about why and how we get stuck sometimes and how we might find a way out of the maze. Thanks to Meredith Adelaide and Raul Serpas for jumping on that zoom call and helping me process this project on a macro scale. I'm eternally grateful for the final push. As I listened back, I realized I couldn't use it for intro/outro as planned, but it might actually be worth sharing as a way to connect with any of you who have ever had trouble "shipping." Thanks for listening to this season and look forward to bringing you more conversations soon enough.
Dennis Demori is an expert email marketer and Twitter personality. He has worked with the likes of Ed Latimore, Casey Research, Ryan Booth, Chase Dimond, and The Primal Man. Dennis will teach you how to building a freedom-based, one-person business.
Great episode if you are wanting to know what archery practice should look like for your archer. Scott and Wendi talked with Ryan Booth and Julia Cook about what practice looks like for them. Also what should practice look like for beginners to advanced archers. Ryan has been going through Mental Management training and shares how it has changed his daily routine and has made him mentally stronger! #raisinganarcher #texasarchery #youtharchery #targetarchery #archery
Our experts in health economics, value communication, design and digital discuss how to craft digital payer value communication tools to meet the needs of internal stakeholders, including market access teams and KAMs, and healthcare customers. What does a best-in-class value communication tool look like in 2022? What are the key considerations when developing a new payer value toolkit? And what should Pharma and Medtech companies look for in a consultancy partner?For this webinar we brought together representatives from our health economics (Anthony Bentley), value communication (Lydia Crowe), design (Ryan Booth) and digital (Rob Pitt) teams to showcase how a typical Mtech Access project team collaborate to create interactive digital tools, with Emily Mair (Associate Consultant) acting as host presenter.Using our updated Digital Value Communication Tool Demo as a case study, our panellists explained how we craft our tools to meet the needs of three key groups:Those who commission the tools – e.g. market access, brand and commercial leadersThe end-users – e.g. key account managersThe audience – e.g. payers and other healthcare decision-makersLearn more at: https://mtechaccess.co.uk/digital-payer-value-communication-tools-webinar/This podcast was originally recorded as a live webinar. The webinar featured a run through of our new demo interactive budget impact model and and value proposition tool. This section has been cut from the podcast recording as it is highly visual. Click here to see the demo video or visit our demo centre to explore the demo yourself. We'd love to show you more - email info@mtechaccess.co.uk to arrange a more detailed demo and discussion meeting.
Join the Executive Team pastors Andy Addis, Eric Franklin, Shaen Marks and Ryan Booth to discuss what the empty tomb of Easter is a year round celebration!
Join the Executive Team pastors Andy Addis, Eric Franklin, Shaen Marks and Ryan Booth to discuss what the empty tomb of Easter is a year round celebration!
Ryan Booth is a filmmaker who's directed work for brands like Google, Spotify, and Amazon, as well as creating multiple features of his own. In this episode, Ryan talks about his approach to storytelling, finding the good in his past creative work, and how he found his visual identity at a photography workshop in Cambodia.This episode of Make Something Cool is brought to you by Riverside, the best online recording solution in the world. Check out Riverside here at https://riverside.fm/lp.Sign up for Find Something Cool, a curated newsletter designed to keep you inspired to create: alexsugg.com/newsletter.If you enjoy the podcast, please Like and Subscribe! You can also leave a short review on Apple Podcasts or Spotify. It takes less than 60 seconds, and it makes a huge difference for the show!This episode was edited and produced by Josh Perez. If you're looking for help with your podcast, Josh is your guy. Connect with him at www.justjoshperez.com.Follow Alex:Twitter: https://twitter.com/alexsuggInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/alexsugg
GENRE: Action / TONE: Cry Your Eyes Out / DEMO: Fans of The Coen Bros / MANDATE: Must contain at least one actor from the cast of The Goonies.A Weekend Video Production in association with Plot DevicesSponsored by MusicbedThanks to Musicbed for sponsoring this episode. Use coupon code GAMESHOW at checkout to receive your first month free when you purchase an annual subscription and start unlocking your films' full potential: http://share.mscbd.fm/writersroomgameshowCREDITSHosts/Contestants: Ryan Polly (ryanpolly.net) and Seth Worley (sethworley.com) Edited by: Rene Gomez (renegomez.net)Key Art: Meg Lewis (meglewis.com)Original Music: Ben Worley (benworley.work)Executive Producers: Grant Wakefield at Weekend Video and Anne Fogerty at Plot DevicesGot a better idea? We now have a Notes Hotline! Call 1 (866) HEY-WRGS and leave your name, which movie idea your notes are regarding, and your notes! We want to hear how you would do the assignment better. By leaving a message you're consenting to us possibly playing your recording live on the air.Join the WRGS Discord! https://discord.gg/uxqAxybWJj Check out writersroomgame.show to listen to all of our episodes and keep in touch. You can even submit some of your own studio mandates for us to add to the generator.And don't forget to rate and review our podcast on Apple Podcasts!
Here is a little trivia for you: what is the oldest and longest-surviving company in North America? Think the fur trade, striped, colourful blankets, and a coat of arms that features one fox, two elk and four beavers. Give up? It’s Hudson’s Bay, of course!Founded in 1670 with their first department store opening in 1881, The Bay now operates close to 100 locations across Canada along with a huge online store that ships across the country. From fashion apparel to home goods, whatever you want – The Bay probably has. But how can such an iconic brand stay relevant as local shops and direct to consumer brands eat away at market share?In this episode of Think Retail, we speak with Ryan Booth, Director of Design at Hudson’s Bay about the very exciting (and daunting) challenge he has taken on. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Okay, maybe Winners and Binners is a bit harsh, but indeed that's what happened with the guests in part 1 of our Sno*Drift rally review. The father daughter team of Stephen and Katie Gingras have shown impressive performance at other events, but unfortunately the icy conditions caught out the #12 NA4WD Subaru. If it was slick for 4WD machinery, just imagine what it was like for a RWD Subaru BRZ! And that's exactly what our next guest Santiago Iglasias of Escudería Boricua Rally drove to a class win in Regional L2WD. Also at the top of their class was National NA4WD class winner Mark Piatkowski who said that the ice in Michigan is chemically different than anywhere else. Adding to the winners circle of this episode is the energetic Fabrizio Mirandola, driver of the fabulous Fiat 500 Abarth that claimed the regional O2WD class win. The car may be small, but it's quick, so quick it even claimed an overall class stage win vs. the nationals! We round out the episode with Ryan Booth's Sno*Drift experience that started out great in a solid 4th overall and leading the class of high performance R5 machinery, but then it all went wrong on the first stage in the second loop.
Hey gang this week on the podcast we are going back in time and revisiting this interview with director Ryan Booth that was originally recorded for Episode #99 of the podcast. Always fun digging in to the archives and as the show has been flooded with new listeners from the Youtube channel I thought this was […] The post The Wandering DP Podcast: Episode #264 – Ryan Booth (Revisited) appeared first on Cinematography Podcast & Tutorials.
Join Pastors Andy Addis and Ryan Booth for this edition of CPXL: The Glory of Christmas and salvaging 2020. Looking at the Luke 2 story of Christmas and figuring out how to make the most of a year that everyone seems to be writing off!
Every single one of us had the guy in our unit that thought he was just THE best. Hair always done (and out of regs), sunglasses on all the time, and maybe even makeup? Eyeliner at least? Come on Hernandez, nobody's eyes pop like that!I got distracted.In this episode we sit down with Jake McLaughin who ACTUALLY went Hollywood. You might know him from Warrior, Savages, In the Valley of Elah, or even his role as Ryan Booth on Quantico. Jake talks with us about his journey after the service and the many ups and downs he's faced. Tune in and learn some stuff!
Join pastors Andy Addis, Shaen Marks and Ryan Booth as they discuss the difficulties of shutting in person church attendance down, returning and rebooting in a very difficult and tumultuous time.
The ultimate behind the scenes conversation between Matti and Pete. They talk about hair styles, them buying their favorite vehicles (and Ford not giving Peter a truck), and eventually talk about Jon Olsson surfing with dolphins. They drool over the Bronco commercial bone by Ryan Booth, and break down why it’s so great, where the VFX masks are, and… how Bryan Cranston sold them on the Bronco. Special Thanks / Credits Show Photo - @alenpalander Audio Guidance - @itsryanfreeman Producer - @tylerrichardwells — For Clips and Other Fun, follow: The Matti & Pete Show Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/mattiandpete/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/mattiandpete Website: https://www.mattiandpeteshow.com/ Matti Haapoja Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/mattih/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/MattiHaapoja Peter McKinnon Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/petermckinnon/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/petermckinnon — About The Matti & Pete Show From the Peaks in B.C., to the Switchbacks in Switzerland, to the Dunes in Dubai, Matti Haapoja and Peter McKinnon are two YouTuber’s at the top of their game. Together they have some of the gnarliest cinematic footage on the platform, but are now putting down their cameras and picking up the mics to talk about their day-to-day as creators, YouTube trends, entrepreneurship, and of course, gear. Oh yeah, and there will be some sweet interviews with other creators and friends too.
In Love with the Process | Filmmaking | Photography | Lifestyle |
Directing documentaries is an incredibly demanding, immersive, and, yes, cinematic job. For another director-director conversation, Host Mike Pecci is joined by Ryan Booth to discuss Ryan's experience crafting the narrative of real stories. Ryan's portfolio includes collaborations with Nike, Spotify, and Vevo as well as a handful of Vimeo Staff Picks. His artistic style, incredible sound design, and ability to make any environment a canvas through available light make episode this a can't miss. Ryan Booth's IG: instagram.com/ryanbooth Ryan Booth's Website: www.ryanbooth.tv Mike Pecci's IG: instagram.com/mikepecci ILWP's IG: instagram.com/inlovewiththeprocesspod ILWP Subreddit: www.reddit.com/r/inlovewiththeprocess ILWP Website: www.inlovewiththeprocess.com The Episode is Sponsored by: Puget Systems: www.pugetsystems.com/solutions/cont…th_the_process Puget Systems Consultation: www.pugetsystems.com/landing/Puget-…_hsmi=86870814 Quasar Science: www.quasarscience.com/ Support our show by signing up for a 30 day free trial at www.audibletrial.com/InLoveWithTheProcess ILWP Sponsor Page: www.inlovewiththeprocess.com/sponsors
Most people live lives of quiet desperation. Don't be most people. Go the extra mile. Do the extra work to make your life a masterpiece. ㅤ ... ㅤ Edited by: @benlionelscott Spoken by: Ray Lewis, Greg Plitt, Andy Frisella Footage by: Maxim Murochkin, Hunters House Agency, A7 Production, Ryan Booth, Miles Kerr, Kurppa Hosk, Nick Davis, HeydSaffer, Rumbo Films, Shin Horikane Music: Really Slow Motion and Giant Apes - Into The Horizon ㅤ ... ㅤ Making the right decisions is a 1 on 1 battle. Whatever the majority of the crowd is doing, find your way doing the opposite. And see 9 times out of 10 how right you turn out to be. That's what you gotta put in your head every decision you make. People don't realize what you got to give up to become great. What sacrifices you gotta make to become great. What promises you gotta make to yourself to become great. Greatness ain't a thought process, greatness is a lifestyle. It's what you live like. It's what you get up everyday and breathe. Success doesn't know these things about cold or early or tired, it just knows if you showed up or not. Isn't about time you become that person you knew you always could be? How do you do that? You break the f*cking mold guys. You get the f*ck out of bed when it's cold, when it's early, you do something away from the normality of what you've been doing. Why not try it man? You can't talk it all the time, you gotta walk it. Commit to one day, try it, see how it feels getting up the f*cking early when everyone else is asleep, or it's that cold. When everybody else says no, this is not comfortable, you shouldn't do this, you say yes mothf*cker, I'm gonna introduce myself to it. You do a little extra effort here. You take whatever is normal, and you do a little extra to it. That's what makes extraordinary. What's that extra? The extra rep, getting up an extra half an hour earlier. Those little extras combine to a word called extra with ordinary together to make extraordinary. Stop f*cking going about the day as a servant, become the master, run your day and stop having it run you. Believe in yourself. Be that 1 of 100 that has a belief instead of just f*cking jaw jab talk of intent. Huge differential there. The differential is somebody just breathing life, and the other one taking the most of the opportunity and time of life. Remembrance, otherwise forgotten. You have to realize that one day your life is gonna flash before you, and the credits are going to roll, and it's gonna be 2 options, it's gonna say oh sh*t it's too late, or it's gonna say f*ck yeah I kicked ass. And that's the bottom line. So when they bury you, is your tombstone gonna say what might've been, or is your tombstone gonna say hell yeah I f*cking killed it?
In this show we look back on last week's Wales Rally GB where there was an American invasion of sorts competing in the Junior WRC. We called up Keanna Erickson-Chang and Ryan Booth just after they got home to find out more about what it's like to complete one of the world's most challenging rallies. In this episode we mentioned several stage-end interviews you may not have heard on WRC All Live. Here's a link to all the interviews conducted by the Wales Rally GB media team: https://eventnewss.ynil.com/events/2019/WRGB/WRC/itinerary-WRC.html
In this episode we review the Ojibwe Forests Rally from a couple of weeks ago with special guest and Ojibwe National Open 2WD winner Ryan Booth. Ryan had a stand-out performance in his first outing in a McKenna Motorsports Fiesta R2 while Ian was happy to be back in the right seat of the Three Triangles Rally Truck. Join us for a great discussion about some of the best stage roads in the American Rally Association championship.
Have you ever wondered what it takes to be a commercial director? If I told you that it takes a lot of losing would you still be interested? Today’s guest has honed the perfect mindset for turning his rejections into personal wins and his career has been taking off ever since. There’s a good chance many of you have heard of Ryan Booth. He’s a prolific young filmmaker who has worked as a DP and director on commercials for some of the country’s biggest brands. These days, Ryan wears many different hats. As a Brooklyn-based Texan, he directs commercials, pitches documentary series and TV shows, and develops his own features. In this candid chat, Ryan shares his journey into the world of directing commercials. Getting to where he is today took a lot of focus and determination, as well as a realization of where his true priorities lie. We talk about the power that lies in having other people on board your team who are just as dedicated to getting the project done as you. As someone with talent and experience in so many different areas, Ryan has had to learn how and when to focus his efforts, which has been the key to his continuing success. How do you pick yourself up after rejection? Leave a comment and let me know on the episode page! In this episode Realizing where your time is best spent when you have many different priorities at once The dangers of multitasking and knowing when you need help moving from one task to the next How to deal with the bids you lose after you’ve spent so much time preparing them Finding the ideal work-life balance through trial, error, and reflection Quotes “I’ve realized that my lofty ideas will never happen without the dedicated effort of producers.” [12:50] “I do plenty of detailed mundane boring stuff, but when I’m directing a commercial that’s not my job. My job is to steer the ship. It is to cast the vision. It is to execute that vision. Getting in the weeds is really problematic.” [16:35] “To pitch well, I have to put myself fully into the project. To do that, I have to be vulnerable to the fact that I will likely lose more than I win.” [20:45] “Putting your heart into what you make in my opinion is the only long-term viable way to do this for a living.” [25:34] Links Find Ryan Booth online Follow Ryan on Instagram | Twitter | Vimeo | IMDB Women Who Run With Wolves by Dr. Clarissa Pinkola Estés Scriptnotes Get notified about the next Studio Sherpas training or conference Additional Links: Check out the full show notes page Do you have something to share on this podcast? Fill out this form here. Be sure to take the Studio Sherpas survey for a chance to win some incredible prizes (if we do say so ourselves!) Stay up to date with everything we're doing at Studio Sherpas Tune into our weekly Facebook Lives Follow Studio Sherpas on Facebook | Twitter | Instagram If you haven't already, we'd love it if you would take 1 minute to leave us a review on iTunes!
The Art vs. Commerce podcast is back! After a hiatus the show returns to kick things off with friend of the pod Ryan Booth. We felt Ryan would make for a great guest to relaunch as he has been through so much career change since we last spoke in 2015. In this episode we compare and contrast our previous conversation learning about his journey and what insights he has gained since becoming a repped commercial director on the Pulse Film roster. Booth’s filmmaking career began in 2011 when his first attempt at making short film won a contest hosted by Vimeo and Canon and premiered at Sundance Film Festival. Booth was an audio engineer living in Texas at the time. After Sundance he came home and quit his job and dove headfirst into filmmaking. He spent the next few years cutting his teeth as a Director of Photography, working on commercial projects for Fox, MTV, Spotify, Under Armour, Pepsi, and Budweiser, as well as music videos for Atlantic Records, Sony, and Universal Music. He DP'd narrative and documentary features that have screened at Sundance, SXSW, Tribeca Film Festivals, among others. In 2016, Ryan DP'd a feature documentary that was commissioned by Alejandro G. Iñárritu that explores the modern implications of the themes woven into Iñárritu’s film, The Revenant. The film was directed by Eliot Rausch and the experience working with Eliot and Alejandro proved to be the catalyst that began his transition into directing. Ryan has always been drawn to telling the stories of real people. He naturally began his directing work in documentaries. He created a doc series pilot called Five Star, about the insane world of college football recruiting. This led to shopping deals with SpringHill Entertainment and Preferred Content. He naturally moved into branded content, directing projects for Spotify and Google. He then caught the eye of Pulse Films, the award winning production company behind American Honey and Lemonade. In the spring of 2017 he was offered a spot on Pulse's commercial roster and within a few months of beginning to pitch, was directing national campaigns with Weiden + Kennedy for Fox Sports and Anheuser-Busch. He's currently pitching as much as possible and looks forward to collaborating with some of the best agencies in the world. Additionally, Ryan co-wrote and directed his first narrative short, The Heights, as a proof of concept for what would be his first narrative feature. Not one to wait around for permission, he is actively developing a handful of film and television projects with writers and producers from around the world.
Today's Heavy Networking is a roundtable show where we talk with engineers about the challenges of building a networking career when you don't live in a big city. We talk about how to find jobs, get training, advance your skills, and build community. Our guests are Phil Gervasi, Ryan Booth, and Eric Stover. The post Heavy Networking 447: Building A Networking Career Outside The Big City appeared first on Packet Pushers.
Today's Heavy Networking is a roundtable show where we talk with engineers about the challenges of building a networking career when you don't live in a big city. We talk about how to find jobs, get training, advance your skills, and build community. Our guests are Phil Gervasi, Ryan Booth, and Eric Stover. The post Heavy Networking 447: Building A Networking Career Outside The Big City appeared first on Packet Pushers.
Today's Heavy Networking is a roundtable show where we talk with engineers about the challenges of building a networking career when you don't live in a big city. We talk about how to find jobs, get training, advance your skills, and build community. Our guests are Phil Gervasi, Ryan Booth, and Eric Stover. The post Heavy Networking 447: Building A Networking Career Outside The Big City appeared first on Packet Pushers.
It's not going to be a cakewalk. Some things in life, if you really want it, you're going to have to go out and go get it with everything you have within. ㅤ ... ㅤ Edited by: @benlionelscott Spoken by: Inky Johnson, Grant Cardone, Sugar Ray Leonard, Eric Thomas Footage by: FELT, MILE 44, Ryan Booth, Sam Sweeney, BLURRED Pictures, Justin Derry, Maged Nassar, Patrick Lawler, Steeven K, NewSpring Creative, Ed David Music: Really Slow Motion and Giant Apes - Time Bender ㅤ
You must get comfortable within the process of getting to your goals. ㅤ ... ㅤ Edited by: @benlionelscott Spoken by: Elliot Hulse, Adam Poswolsky, Bill Eckstrom, Eric Thomas, Andy Frisella, Tyrese Gibson Footage by: Believe Media, Common Good, Curious Beast, Filmsupply Challenge, Liam Gilmour, Joshua Rainhard, Nike, Suleman, Anton Geissmar, Brian Leider, Darrin Klimek, erik ian, Hector Montano, Ryan Booth, Tricolour Global Music: Hans Zimmer - Man Of Steel: General Zod / Arcade Suite (Orchestral Cover) ㅤ
Alreeeet! Welcome to Speak Up Sunderland! Join Betty Ball & Stevie B for this weekly podcast, proudly made both in and about Sunderland! Today, Stevie learns to "SUCK IT IN", shows off his brick, and Betty gets a little too wet in the fountains. Why? Our friends met with Ryan Booth, an emerging photographer based in Sunderland, and travelled to three of the locations we put in Betty's hat last week. Follow our journey on Twitter - @SpeakUpSun. Featuring music by Timecrawler 82. Produced by Jay Sykes.
Alreeeet! Welcome to Speak Up Sunderland! Join Betty Ball & Jay... I mean Stevie B for this weekly podcast, proudly made both in and about Sunderland! Join us, and let us "envelop" you in the "warm, moist" sounds of this episode as our friends pick 5 locations each in Sunderland, to have their photos taken. This is the first of a two-part episode; next week we'll be meeting with Sunderland-based photographer Ryan Booth, and racing around the city with Ryan's lens. Follow our journey on Twitter - @SpeakUpSun. Featuring music by Timecrawler 82. Produced by Jay Sykes.
Alreeeet! Welcome to Speak Up Sunderland! Join Betty Ball & Stevie B for this weekly podcast, proudly made both in and about Sunderland! This is our first "Q&A" style episode. Questions about the show, and about our hosts. You asked - and betty & Stevie answered. You also helped suggest some general Sunderland knowledge questions, to test how much they really know the city. Thanks to our contributors; Abi Fullerton, Vin Todd, Ryan Booth, Marge Surtees, Miranda Ashitey & Stephanie Smith. Follow our journey on Twitter - @SpeakUpSun. Featuring music by Timecrawler 82. Edited by Jay Sykes. A Jammy Audio production.
Today's guest is Ryan Booth (Writer/Director with credits ranging from music videos and commercial work to film ). On this episode, the two Ryans talk about directing and their personal pathways toward making their first features. Links: Visit our site for more: Filmriot.com/podcast Connect with Ryan Booth: IMDB - Twitter - Instagram - Website - Vimeo Connect with Ryan: IMDB - Twitter - Instagram - Facebook - Youtube
Noam Kroll talks about low-budget filmmaking, maximizing your resources in pre-production, and honing your craft through trial and error. Noam’s Website: http://noamkroll.com Twitter: https://twitter.com/noamkroll Instagram: https://instagram.com/noamkroll Vimeo: https://vimeo.com/noamkroll Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/noamkroll “Micro” short film: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xDZKcS56W_M “I Feel Fine” music video I used as an example of low budget lighting: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Bc2ZufPhvto “The Heights”, Ryan Booth’s short we mentioned: https://vimeo.com/246509344 ------- Firehouse Creative: http://www.wearethefirehouse.com On Instagram: http://www.instagram.com/firehousecreative On Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/firehouse_ca On Youtube: http://www.youtube.com/wearethefirehouse Like, Review, and Subscribe!
(Rebroadcast)This week we chat with our good friend, Ryan Booth, about The Hateful 8, and also the unique relationship between a DP and the Director.
The Datanauts explore the current state of network automation and telemetry and discuss how network engineers can transition from the CLI to a more automated infrastructure. Our guest is Ryan Booth. The post Datanauts 080: The Current State Of Network Automation & Telemetry appeared first on Packet Pushers.
The Datanauts explore the current state of network automation and telemetry and discuss how network engineers can transition from the CLI to a more automated infrastructure. Our guest is Ryan Booth. The post Datanauts 080: The Current State Of Network Automation & Telemetry appeared first on Packet Pushers.
The Datanauts explore the current state of network automation and telemetry and discuss how network engineers can transition from the CLI to a more automated infrastructure. Our guest is Ryan Booth. The post Datanauts 080: The Current State Of Network Automation & Telemetry appeared first on Packet Pushers.
In this episode we sit down and speak with Director and DP Ryan Booth. Ryan discusses his film background, film style, and what it was like to film a documentary on the set of The Revenant.
An excerpt from our new podcast about HBO's "Westworld" and a discussion about Spike Lee's "Do the Right Thing" set the stage for an insightful discussion about how an audience responds to your film.A few weeks ago JD, Yolanda and I apparently felt like we didn't have enough time arguing and debating with each other on "Radio Film School", so we decided to take our passionate debates to a new "frontier"—HBO's "Westworld." Our new podcast "Wrestling with Westworld" is a weekly fun, funny, and engaging discussion about the new hit show. On the very first episode, we had a great conversation about audience reception and a filmmaker's ability to effectively and accurately convey their message to the audience. I felt it would be very informative to share with my RFS audience.As a follow up to the "Westworld" convo, I share a discussion that JD and I originally had last year about "Do the Right Thing". In it we address Spike Lee's comments that he believes the Danny Aiello character, Sal, is a racist, whereas both JD and I don't necessarily think he is. As the writer/director, did Spike do a good job of communicating to the audience that Sal is indeed a racist? That's what we explore. Special "guest star" appearance by filmmaker Ryan Booth. Music in this EpisodeMusic was curated from FreeMusicArchive.org. In order of appearance, the music in this episode was:Fire Aheadby Jahzzar (CC B-SA)Black Lungby Broke for Free (CC BY)Night Owl by Brokefor Free (CC BY)Old Western Firefightby Cullah (CC BY-SA)Western Firefight 2by Cullah (CC BY-SA)Click here to learn about Creative Commons licenses and meanings.Reach OutIf you have a question about the movie business you'd like answered, or if you just want to drop us a line to say "Hi", email us at radiofilmschool@daredreamer.fm. Better yet, use the "Send Voicemail" button at the bottom of our website to leave a voicemail message. Follow Ron on Twitter @DareDreamerFM, or follow the show @RadioFilmSchool. Join the discussion at facebook.com/radiofilmschool.
Dallas Taylor is a sound designer and business owner of Defacto Sound, a sound design and mixing house based in Washington D.C. The shop takes on projects from a wide variety of genres including commercials, video games, network promos, short docs and feature length films. Clients include National Geographic, Audi, Redbull, Fallout and Skyroom (video game trailers). A recent feature doc they did titled Blood Brothers won Sundance and another titled Almost Holy is currently in theaters after screening at Tribeca. I’ve known Dallas for a few years now since he began working with fellow film collaborators (and podcast guests) Jon Bregel of Variable, Ryan Booth and Andy Baker of National Geographic. Dallas is always inquisitive, eager to steer conversation away from the mundane, diving into deeper discussion about the craft, the industry or life in general. I think this approach to people, wanting to get past the surface pleasantries, is at the root of his continued success. In the podcast Dallas takes us on his journey from aspiring jazz trumpet player to high end sound designer. Along the way we pick up advice and insight on how to make big life moves and how to build a successful company.
Every artist deals with it in their career—the difference between what they envision, and what they actually create. How to deal?There's a well-known video of "This American Life" host Ira Glass sharing his thoughts about what he calls "The Gap." It's the difference between your taste (what you know to be good work) and your talent (what it is you're actually able to create, which is often not as good as you'd like it to be). This week, on the first main "Radio Film School" episode of 2016, we dive into this issue. You'll hear from Sam Mestman, CEO of We Make Movies; Ryan Booth, filmmaker, DP and creator of the music performance web series "Serial Box Presents"; and Patrick Moreau, co-founder of Stillmotion and LearnStory.org. If you've ever faced "the Gap," this is the episode for you."Shooting Sunshine" ReturnsWe also have the next installment of my "Shooting Sunshine" segment. The behind the scenes look at the making of "Little Mixed Sunshine", the first episode in my short film documentary series about bi-racial people. In it, I answer the question: "Why is this film STILL NOT DONE?!" Support Our Sponsor and You Support the ShowA huge way you can support the show is by checking out our sponsors. We're supported in part by Song Freedom. Click here and use offer code radio for a one-time Standard Gold Level license worth $30.We're also supported by YOU, the listeners. Become a Dare Dreamer FM Premium member and gain access to bonus episodes, ebooks, templates, and other resources to help you grow in your craft and career.Music in this EpisodeMusic in this episode was curated from Free Music Archive, Kevin Macleod's Incompetech.com and Song Freedom."Hola Hola Bossa Nova" by Juanitos. CC BY."Machinations" & "Plans in Motion" by Kevin Macleod of Incompetech.com. CC BY."There are Many Different kinds of Love" by Chris Zabriskie. CC BY."Fire Ahead" by Jahzzar. CC BY-SA."dream gate" by Fog Lake. CC BY."The Theatrical Trailer for Poltergeist III" by Chris Zabriskie. CC BY."Snowmen" by Kai Engel. CC BY."Cherubs" (No vocals) by Josh Woodward. CC BY.Songs used during the Song Freedom sponsor segment are courtesy of SongFreedom.com. (All rights reserved). Click here for the mixtape of songs.Counting Stars by One Republic. All rights reserved.Ain’t too Proud by the TemptationsInspirational Ambient Build by BanvardVideos Featured in Today's ShowThe video created by Current.tv that started it all. "Storytelling" by Ira Glass (part 3 of 4).Two other interpretations of "The Gap" on video:This Vimeo Staff Pick incarnation by Daniel Sax is quite impressive. (Over 1.3 million views as of this writing.)This title motion graphic by David Shiyang Liu inspired Daniel's video.
This week we chat with our good friend Ryan Booth about The Hateful 8, and also the unique relationship between a DP and the Director.
When thinking about people in the film industry who inspire me I think it breaks down into two groups of people: Hollywood level stars and people I view as peers. Ryan is a friend, peer and complete inspiration. Not only in the way he motivates me to be a better filmmaker and person, but on a more technical level as well. I love his style and try to learn from it. His eye is top notch and given the right opportunities I really do think his career is limitless. In this episode we cover his background and how he eventually became a filmmaker. Unlike a few of the other guests, being a director and cinematographer were not things he wanted to be even into his early to mid twenties. It’s always interesting when someone with such raw talent does not tap into it initially. I think the conversation about how to find it and stoke that fire can be beneficial and applicable for anyone regardless of craft or trade. In addition to this realization we discuss his current transition into directing and his desire to continue pursuing cinematography in tandem. Process and approach are big themes and I loved hearing what goes on inside his head including his beliefs about how to deal with the facets of filmmaking as well as life in general. His portfolio is strong with a recent commercial campaign for Spotify as a highlight. A lot of his work is in the music space, creating a project called Serialbox Presents which showcases up and coming musical acts. He also directs and shoots cinematic music videos often turning them into short films with Hollywood level actors.
Grant and Vince sit bring their heads together with sensationally smart cinematographer and director Ryan Booth in a discussion of ends and means. Through Ryan’s own winding road of career and creativity, the trio talks culmination, and what it really means to be the sum of our parts.
Today we have a very special bonus episode of the show. A couple of weeks ago we had Ryan Connolly of Film Riot fame talking about the disasters he encountered making his short film “U.F. Oh Yeah.” Ryan's DP on that shoot was the talented Mr. Ryan Booth. Ryan Booth is the creator of Serialbox.tv, a cinematic sensation whereby Booth and his team record one-take acoustical performances of indie bands, shoot them with multiple cameras, and edit it music video style. If you’ve never seen them, go check ‘em out at Serialbox.tv.But here’s the thing, Ryan Booth’s style of cinematography is very different from the type of work Ryan Connolly usually puts out. I was curious as to why Connolly chose Booth to DP this film. In today’s bonus episode we hear from both of them regarding that decision.
Filmmaker, Ryan Booth, is the innovative mind behind SerialBox Presents. His work has been trusted by Spotify, South by Southwest, and groundbreaking artists like The Lone Bellow and David Ramirez. While many interviews with filmmakers discuss the craft of filmmaking, this particular one focusses on leadership, specifically, the humility and teamwork it takes to make things that move people.