09 Looks Good

January 29th, 2009

Every morning my alarm clock goes off, waking me to the sound of Dave Ross’s voice on KIRO news radio. There have been times when I think I should change the station.  It seems like every day I wake up to his voice rattling off the number of jobs that were lost that in the days before. I hear him talking about the stock market losses and the overall impression I’m left with is that things are not looking up.  It’s depressing. Sometimes I think I should change the radio station.

It’s terrible to know that things are getting as bad as I hear they are. That’s just it though; I hear. Having not experienced any of this downturn personally, I consider myself very fortunate. In October, when it was big news, I remember hearing talk of it everywhere I went, never saw it though. My schedule in October was busier than it had ever been. Yellowbook shoots, the Sweet Adelines concert, and none of it showed any signs of slowing down. I even booked a wedding for November, something unprecedented for me. As bad as I heard things were getting, I still didn’t see it.

Toward the end of November and the beginning of December things slowed down. The Yellowbook shoots fizzled to non-existence. Weddings stopped. There were no gigs forthcoming. I was fine with that because I was prepared for the reality that November through March are my slowest months. Before December was out, I had booked two more weddings. January enters, and 2009 is upon us. I’m taking it slow, starting to crunch my numbers for taxes. I purchased my first print advertisement in The Olympian’s Bridal guide. With one purchase, ’09′s advertising budget had already surpassed ’08′s.

Going in to February, I’m getting e-mails and calls about doing weddings and other gigs. The yellowbook shoots came back; with a vengeance. All in one week! Things are seriously blowing up.
I know that economic downturns are a chance for new and innovative ideas to really make their marks, and I feel like I have some of this within that I want to bring to the table. Trouble is, what I thought was going to be a slow time is turning out to be much busier than anticipated. There are interesting new methods I’ve wanted to implement in my marketing strategy, along with updating my website. Apparently the time I was looking forward to resting on my laurels has come and gone.

Why? Quality? Pricing? I think both. The work I offer is on qualitative par with people charging double what I charge. I didn’t drop my prices for the depression, they’ve been set since spring ’08. I think my quality will show, and my prices will win major points. Because I’m not doing this out of greed. I’m not trying to pay off a Cadillac Escalade, or a similarly ridiculously large and overpriced house. I’m doing this because it’s really what I want to do.

Every day.

 

The Mike McClure Benefit Golf Tournament

January 23rd, 2009

Back in September I received a phone call inquiring how much I would charge to film a golf tournament, and create a highlight video to go along with it.  The caller informed me if was for a friend of hers who had received terrible injuries from a horrible accident. The tournament was to be a benefit, to help he and his family with medical bills and other things while he was out of work.

I told her I would check my availability, crunch some numbers and get back to her with a price.  After finding that I had nothing scheduled, I started trying to figure out how much I would charge to shoot, edit, encode, and DVD author this video.  Then it dawned on me – I would do it for free.

I called her back and let her know that I would volunteer my time to shoot and edit this video. Each DVD copy would cost $20 dollars, and I sold 4. I certainly didn’t make any money on this thing, but that wasn’t really the point.  I think everything came out quite awesome, I like the videos a lot.

Brad Sucks is kind of a default music for many projects I do for a couple of reasons. One – He Rocks.  Seriously. Two – Royalty Free.  So Brad Sucks make perfect sense to use for stuff like this, he put his music out there for anyone to use freely, and I think that’s pretty rad.  I volunteered my time to film this golf tournament, and all in all it was a fun and entertaining day.

That was the intro video, and the next is the Highlight Reel of the day’s events. Be forewarned – it’s 12 minutes long!

Enjoy!

 

More Yellowbook

January 12th, 2009

A couple more Yellowbook shoots from December have been completed and are now live.

If you’re interested, these are pretty sweet, I like them.  There are still a few more in the pipes, a couple I’m actually anticipating quite a bit, a Baptist School in Tacoma, and an automotive shop in Auburn.

Anyway, here’s what’s new -

Stanley Patrick Striping – An asphalt/curbing repair/installation business in Enumclaw.

Columbia Heating – An HVAC repair/installation company in Kent.

For some reason I thought there were more, but upon review of my logs, that’s all for now.

Thanks!

 

Deschutes River Flood Video

January 8th, 2009

Decided to walk down to the old Olympia Brewery and film the Deschutes River a little bit this morning. We’ve had record flooding in local rivers. This is due in part to a lot of rain in the past few days, but mostly because of our record snowfall the last weeks of December, coupled with unseasonably warm temperatures during the rain. It all melts, now I-5 is closed in Chehalis to the South, and Tacoma to the North, really effectively isolating Olympia from the world. Sweet! Olympia is pretty much one of the raddest places anyway.

I shot this in 60 frames per second to get some sweet slow motion action. No, my camera is not HDV, and yes, it can shoot 60fps. Hooray DVX100b!

 

Updates

January 7th, 2009

A couple of updates here in the second week of January are needed.

Like that snow? Ridiculous.  Glad it’s gone, really.  When I plunged a yardstick in to the flattest area of my backyard it read 17 inches.  Seriously.  I’m so delighted that the rain is back, I’m thinking about putting on my dancing shoes and doing a tap number in the middle of my street.

Just a little footage captured during my boredom while snowed in on the 7th day. While it was surely driving me a little stir-crazy, I got a little cabin fever to be sure, it was also a great opportunity for productivity in the editing department.

Nick and Lois had wanted to know if I could get them their wedding video by Christmas.  Well, it would be a little on the narrow side, I told them I couldn’t make any promises, but would do what I could.

Sunday December 21st, 1st day of winter, 5th or 6th consecutive snow day in our region; I agree to meet Nick and Lois to hand deliver their DVD’s, as I don’t know if the USPS could effectively deliver the package in 3 days, with the holiday, and the conditions.

My car being stuck, my friend John drives me to the Kinko’s where I print the DVD sleeves.  Everything is looking good, we stop and buy tubes for sledding while we’re out and about.  I need to get home, insert the sleeves into the DVD cases, with the DVD’s and make the package complete.  Then to a local coffee joint for delivery.

Unfortunately, as we return to my house, John gets his car stuck on a pile of snow in what would be the only area he could really park.  The plow has been piling it up for the last 4 or 5 days.  John ends up staying on the couch that night, getting a ride to work in the morning. The next day after work, we dug him out and he got home.

Nick and Lois ended up meeting me at the bottom of my hill, where I ran through the snow piled up almost 2 feet high, while it was snowing, and hand delivered the DVD’s of their wedding to them, so that they could have them in time to give their parents for Christmas!

Merry Christmas Nick and Lois!

Their video turned out great, and though I like the Pre-Ceremony Montage a lot, I’m going to share the Post-Ceremony Montage here –

So here is what Nick and Lois had to say about their wedding video -

Ken,

WE LOVE IT!! It was just what I wanted… seriously!! I am picky and you pleased me very much.
It was last minute but it was soo needed to create our lifetime memory of that special day :)

Thank you,

Nick and Lois

Once again, I feel I should iterate that the emphasis in quotes from clients is always original, never added! I love it when a plan comes together!  Seriously, not much makes me feel better than knowing a client is happy with the work I’ve provided.

Nick and Lois’s wedding also marks a kind of monumental occasion for me business-wise, in that for the 3 years I’ve been doing video production work professionally I’ve never booked a wedding after September. Theirs was November 15th.  Another good thing is that ’09 is already starting to fill up.  Good stuff!

Here is the Highlight Reel from Nick and Lois’s wedding.

Thanks for reading!