1 / 26

Video Storytelling

Video Storytelling. Shooting terminology. A-roll = story narrative (what sources or narrator are saying.) B-roll = video transitions added to avoid having talking heads.

menefer
Download Presentation

Video Storytelling

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Video Storytelling

  2. Shooting terminology • A-roll = story narrative (what sources or narrator are saying.) • B-roll = video transitions added to avoid having talking heads. • Remember 80:20 ratio (80 percent should be B-roll and 20 percent should be A-roll interviews – you will always need more B-roll than you think you will.)

  3. Getting good A-roll • Good audio is critical. • Wear headphones and monitor the levels to be sure. • Avoid “stepping on” interviews – be quiet. • Get the mic close to the subject.

  4. A-roll • Use rule of thirds to frame the interviewee.

  5. A-roll • Pay attention to background • Watch for poles or other objects coming out of their heads • Avoid lining up people against walls

  6. Getting good B-roll • Shoot lots of it – and get a variety of shots • wide (helps establish) • medium • close up • For a 1:30 minute video, you will need 35 to 60 shots to keep your viewers interested. • When shooting B-roll, try shooting wide, medium and tight shots of each scene or image. • Some examples

  7. Shoot in sequences • A sequence is a series of images that flow from one to the next -- not just wide/medium/tight. • A sequence sets the scene, shows details, has motion and completes an action.   • BBC’s Five-Shot Method • A good rule of thumb: • 50 percent of shots will be close ups • 25 percent medium • 25 percent wide More examples And more here

  8. Critical shots • Be sure to get an establishing shot – something that sets the scene in one image

  9. Critical shots • Your opening shot should grab the viewer’s attention and help set up your story.

  10. Critical shots • Get a closing shot (someone closing a door, capping a pen, petting a dog, turning out the lights, releasing a butterfly)

  11. Be thinking about shots • Always think about how to get from one shot to the next. • Try to get some kind of transition shot with either an entry or exit. • Close-ups are especially helpful in editing to get from point A to point B.

  12. Shoot lots of cutaways • To avoid jump cuts – some examples

  13. The 180-degree rule • Shoot within 180 degrees around a subject. In other words, don’t walk around your subject when interviewing them. • Some examples

  14. Additional tips • Always pre-roll and post-roll your tape. Record 20 to 60 seconds of black at the beginning and end of your tape. Why? • Hold every shot for at least 10 seconds • Stop recording before you move to the next shot • Don’t move the camera -- avoid zooming and panning • Use a tripod

  15. Good planning = good story • Brainstorm the idea • Make sure the story is worth video. • Action • Emotion • Something people want to see • Visualize the story • Think about which shots you’ll need – make a list • Think about what will be visual • Keep focused on the story – keep it simple

  16. Good planning • Consider creating a storyboard before you shoot. • After shooting you can revise the storyboard to help you focus in the editing process. • Or you can write a script, based on transcription of your interviews.

  17. Good planning • Script example – video tab on class blog

  18. Writing tips • Write to your video. Don’t include information in your story unless you have the visuals to back it up. • When you’re done editing, turn off your speakers and watch your video. Does it still make sense? If so, you’ve done a good job at telling a visual story. • Now turn on your speakers. What you hear should add an entire new layer of information: You don’t need to include information that is already conveyed in the visuals.

  19. Writing Tips • From NBC’s Bob Dotson: • Make sure you know what you want the audience to take away from the story. Formulate this theme to yourself to help guide the story creation. • Then use your images to prove that theme visually. Very seldom will you state the theme verbally in any story. • Write to your pictures first. Write a strong lead that instantly telegraphs the story to come.

  20. Writing Tips • Allow for moments of silence. Stop writing occasionally and let two or three seconds or more of compelling action occur without a voiceover. • For a writer, nothing is more difficult to write than silence. For viewers, sometimes nothing is more eloquent. • Build in surprises to sustain viewer involvement. Surprises help viewers feel something about the story; they lure uninterested viewers to the screen. • Surprises can be visuals, wild sounds, short bites, or poetic script. Always, surprises are little moments of drama.

  21. Some examples (broadcast) • Everybody Has a Story • Art of Compassion • Daddy dentistry

  22. Examples (no narration) • Baseball player • Chicago snow • Neighbor in snow • Roping the Wind • “I want Luis back”

  23. Plenty more examples • Michelle’s Delicious

  24. NewsNet examples • Rubric • Gowns • Haymarket Park

  25. Bottom line • Before you start writing text or editing video, you need to have a very clear idea of the focus of your story. • Your story should be so focused that you can describe it in one sentence. • Once it’s complete, you need to be able to sit back and look at your project as a reader/viewer would. Is your story coherent?

  26. More resources • Knight Digital Media Center • Video Journalists Toolkit • Shooting tips

More Related