News Stories

‘Hockey Night in Canada’ Goes 3D

Panasonic Canada announced this week that it will sponsor CBC’s popular Hockey Night in Canada broadcast in the upcoming NHL season, which will include two 3D broadcasts: Montreal versus Toronto on Saturday, Dec. 1, and the Heritage Classic from McMahon Stadium in Calgary, Sunday, Feb. 20, 2011.

Panasonic will be the official 3D and HDTV sponsor of CBCs Hockey Night in Canada starting this October, and Panasonic production equipment including rigs, Panasonic Professional Full 3D HD cameras and Panasonic 3D production monitors will be used in the 3D production. “We are very pleased to partner with Panasonic on this unique and ground-breaking initiative,” says Scott Moore, Executive Director, CBC Sports and General Manager, CBC Media Sales and Marketing. “Together we will be bringing an experience to Canadian hockey fans that has never been done before. This is a Canadian first and a very exciting time for television and hockey in Canada.” CBC/Radio-Canada is Canada’s national public broadcaster.

“Hockey Night” is among television’s highest-rated programs in Canada and is the world’s oldest sports-related television program still on the air.

MSG Media, the New York-based production company, telecast the first-ever NHL hockey game in 3D on March 24, 2010 during the Rangers-Islanders matchup from Madison Square Garden.

original post: http://www.tvtechnology.com/article/107142

First 3-D concert albums produced in Los Angeles

AIX Media Group in Los Angeles, an independent record label and media production company specializing in the development of DVD-Audio/Video and Blu-ray Discs, recently shot the first 3-D concert albums with Grammy-winning pop artist Rita Coolidge, multiplatinum country artist Mark Chesnutt, classical pianist Bryan Pezzone, the jazz/classical group Free Flight with James Walker and The Old Towne String Quartet.

Previously, AIX has gotten widespread recognition for its attention to audio fidelity and surround sound from customers, reviewers and equipment manufacturers. The company’s tracks have been licensed and used by Intel, Microsoft, Creative Labs, Acura and others to show off the advancement of audio technology and ultimate reproduction of music.

“I believe we’re the only label on the planet to create HD ‘albums’ of music that are not ‘live’ concerts but rather private performances intended for one’s own media room,” said Mark Waldrep, AIX’s founder. “The idea is to have an artist play and sing directly to you from across the room, not come blasting through a couple of speakers from a PA system.

“The next challenge for us was to add a third dimension to our HD albums,” he said. “I planned a project where I would shoot source material for these 3-D music Blu-ray Discs — personal, intimate performances with great surround sound and HD video shot in 3-D.”

For the 3-D production, shot during three days at Los Angeles’ Colburn School for the Performing Arts’ Zipper Auditorium, Waldrep used four new Panasonic 3DA1 camcorders and four preproduction Panasonic BT-3DL2550 3D monitors. The AG-3DA1, which became available in August, is a fully integrated HD 3-D camcorder that records to SD card media.

“The consequence was that I was able to simplify production on a tightly orchestrated shoot, speed up the workflow, have ultimate confidence in what we were seeing on the 3-D monitors and increase efficiencies in post production,” Waldrep said.

The workflow during post included logging and transferring (converting) the AVCHD files through Final Cut Pro 7 into Apple ProRes 422 HQ files for editing and then maintaining files in the ProRes 422 HQ format all the way to the encoder.

Waldrep said the new Panasonic cameras dramatically lowered the cost of the 3-D production when compared to more expensive 3-D production methods and, in fact, made the album projects possible. He finished the music mixes, video edit and convergence tweaks on “Goldberg Variations Acoustica” in June and released it on Blu-ray 3-D as one of the world’s first 3-D concert albums.

AIX plans to make up to six 3-D concert albums available over the next four months and to have an audio calibration and sampler disc available by the time the Consumer Electronics Association does its “3D Demo Days” campaign this month.

“The 3DA1 camcorder represents a success story for the little guy,” Waldrep said. “It’s making it possible for a small company such as ours to produce a suite of 3-D products of audiophile quality for a diverse, potentially large-scale public.”

by Michael Grotticelli September 27th, 2010

original post: http://blog.broadcastengineering.com/3-D/2010/09/27/first-3-d-concert-albums-produced-in-los-angeles/

Also see previous story:

AIX Launches 3D Music Albums

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Specification for Naming VFX Image Sequences Released

ETC’s VFX Working Group has published a specification for best practices naming image sequences such as plates and comps. File naming is an essential tool for organizing the multitude of frames that are inputs and outputs from the VFX process. Prior to the publication of this specification, each organization had its own naming scheme, requiring custom processes for each partner, which often resulted in confusion and miscommunication.

The new ETC@USC specification focuses primarily on sequences of individual images. The initial use case was VFX plates, typically delivered as OpenEXR or DPX files. However, the team soon realized that the same naming conventions can apply to virtually any image sequence. Consequently, the specification was written to handle a wide array of assets and use cases.

To ensure all requirements are represented, the working group included over 2 dozen participants representing studios, VFX houses, tool creators, creatives and others.  The ETC@USC also worked closely with MovieLabs to ensure that the specification could be integrated as part of their 2030 Vision.

A key design criteria for this specification is compatibility with existing practices.  Chair of the VFX working group, Horst Sarubin of Universal Pictures, said: “Our studio is committed to being at the forefront of designing best industry practices to modernize and simplify workflows, and we believe this white paper succeeded in building a new foundation for tools to transfer files in the most efficient manner.”

This specification is compatible with other initiatives such as the Visual Effects Society (VES) Transfer Specifications. “We wanted to make it as seamless as possible for everyone to adopt this specification,” said working group co-chair and ETC@USC’s Erik Weaver. “To ensure all perspectives were represented we created a team of industry experts familiar with the handling of these materials and collaborated with a number of industry groups.”

“Collaboration between MovieLabs and important industry groups like the ETC is critical to implementing the 2030 Vision,” said Craig Seidel, SVP of MovieLabs. “This specification is a key step in defining the foundations for better software-defined workflows. We look forward to continued partnership with the ETC on implementing other critical elements of the 2030 Vision.”

The specification is available online for anyone to use.

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