This document provides an overview of topics related to ethics in online narration and storytelling. It discusses assignments due for the course, the SPJ code of ethics, ethical expectations around transparency, attribution, permissions, and manipulation. It also covers discussions around case studies of ethical challenges in reporting, including discussions on visual ethics and the ethics of editing footage.
They want to do what? Hands on production tips to save your budget and your s...Mike Leon
Does this sound like you?
You’ve got video budget, but not nearly enough to satisfy your video hungry colleagues. Colleagues who are chomping at the bit to create video but then you see what they’ve come up with on their own and it resembles a b-rated horror movie on its best day. Sound familiar?
In this presentation we’ll show you some best practices around creating your own vlog and social media campaigns that look good, stays on brand and empowers colleagues. We’ll provide “do it yourself” shooting, interview and post production tips, plus we’ll also share some great approaches on how to get the most out of your video.
We’ve all been there and we want to help.
They want to do what? Hands on production tips to save your budget and your s...Mike Leon
Does this sound like you?
You’ve got video budget, but not nearly enough to satisfy your video hungry colleagues. Colleagues who are chomping at the bit to create video but then you see what they’ve come up with on their own and it resembles a b-rated horror movie on its best day. Sound familiar?
In this presentation we’ll show you some best practices around creating your own vlog and social media campaigns that look good, stays on brand and empowers colleagues. We’ll provide “do it yourself” shooting, interview and post production tips, plus we’ll also share some great approaches on how to get the most out of your video.
We’ve all been there and we want to help.
Presentation at the Teaching consumer competences to young people - consumer rights from curriculum to real life - conference in Karlstad 8 - 9 December 2011
Integrating Video Into Your Communications StrategyAaron Bramley
I deliveed this presentation to a great group of communicators at the Austin Chapter of the International Association of Business Communicators luncheon on November 8th.
How to use your Home Video Camera to Film Nonprofit Testimonials4Good.org
In this 1 hour webinar, attendees will learn to harness the untapped capabilities of today's smartphones and home video cameras. We will concentrate on one of the simplest, yet most effective forms of video communication - testimonials. By the end of this workshop, you'll know how to set up a video shoot; the three most important types of shots for web video; ways to relax an interviewee to get their best on-camera testimony; and an introduction to putting your video on YouTube and linking to it from your nonprofit website.
This webinar explored new and emerging ways to use online tools to assist those with legal problems and needs who are not able to secure the assistance of counsel. W feature initiatives in WA, TX, and CA, and Ohio.
Presenters:
Daniel Ediger, Northwest Justice Project
Colton Lawrence, Texas Legal Services Center
Neil Bowman-Davis, Napa Superior Court
Michael Walters, Pro Seniors, Inc.
Presentation at the Teaching consumer competences to young people - consumer rights from curriculum to real life - conference in Karlstad 8 - 9 December 2011
Integrating Video Into Your Communications StrategyAaron Bramley
I deliveed this presentation to a great group of communicators at the Austin Chapter of the International Association of Business Communicators luncheon on November 8th.
How to use your Home Video Camera to Film Nonprofit Testimonials4Good.org
In this 1 hour webinar, attendees will learn to harness the untapped capabilities of today's smartphones and home video cameras. We will concentrate on one of the simplest, yet most effective forms of video communication - testimonials. By the end of this workshop, you'll know how to set up a video shoot; the three most important types of shots for web video; ways to relax an interviewee to get their best on-camera testimony; and an introduction to putting your video on YouTube and linking to it from your nonprofit website.
This webinar explored new and emerging ways to use online tools to assist those with legal problems and needs who are not able to secure the assistance of counsel. W feature initiatives in WA, TX, and CA, and Ohio.
Presenters:
Daniel Ediger, Northwest Justice Project
Colton Lawrence, Texas Legal Services Center
Neil Bowman-Davis, Napa Superior Court
Michael Walters, Pro Seniors, Inc.
Generative AI tools like Midjourney and Runway can help make strong visuals. But the tools need the creative spark and expertise of experienced newspeople. Kevin Donnellan from Explainable talks through the basics of navigating the must-have tools for any newsroom.
Social Media Academy 2016 Presentation SlidesHarvardComms
Social Media Academy, November 10, 2016
This Academy event aims to empower attendees with a higher level of expertise and understanding about new multimedia methods and the art forms that populate them. With this knowledge, digital practitioners can more effectively grow their audiences and accomplish their communications goals.
If good design requires failure, how can designers f*ck up when failure isn’t considered an option?
Edison famously said, "I failed my way to success." In the interactive world, we've all heard the buzz phrases about failing fast, and how failure--particularly in the form of prototyping--can be a powerful design tool. But what about real failure? We've all experienced projects that never got off the ground, or crashed and burned stunningly. We don't put them in our portfolios. We only talk about them when we've had one drink too many. What can we learn from our embarrassments? And are there really things we can learn by failing, especially in the agency and consulting worlds, where we are hired for our expertise, and infallibility?
Questions to think about:
Can there be actual power, and knowledge in failure? What is your biggest failure, and what did you learn from it?
What are the different ways you can fail? Have you ever had a "successful" project that was a personal failure? Why? What can you learn from it?
Why are we so afraid of failing? What are the negative consequences of failure? And how can we encourage a positive viewpoint on failure?
How can we pull victory from the flames of defeat? How do you not panic when you sense yourself failing? How can you use your failure to inform future successes?
How can we build an acceptance of failure into a design or consulting practice? How can we get away from always having to be right, and move towards creative adaptability?
2. ASSIGNMENTS
★Readings - Linked from Syllabus
★Final Project Scoring Rubric
★Sample Scripts - Audio, Multimedia
★Thursday, May 12th at 12 noon:
★5 best clips - quotes or b-roll
★Reporting Update #3
★Minute paper on a story you consumed this week
15. ATTRIBUTION
• Licensing: Respect other people’s work
• Creative Commons, Attribution, Non-
Commercial, etc.
• Attribute your information (especially if you
can’t guarantee it)
16. DO I NEED PERMISSION?
• Identify yourself as Journalist
• Off the Record/On the Record
• Photos: public places are fair game, private requires
consent
• Audio: Never record secretly, get consent on
recording
• Video: get consent on recording, release forms
17. PULITZER CENTER IN CRISIS
• Read these two stories:
Story about Pulitzer: http://goo.gl/DGi36
Pulitzer Response: http://goo.gl/vBwXT
• In small (2-3 person) groups, discuss
19. ETHICS DISCUSSION:
EXHUMATION STORY
• Did the reporter, Marco Vernaschi make a mistake?
20. ETHICS DISCUSSION:
EXHUMATION STORY
• Did the reporter, Marco Vernaschi make a mistake?
• Ifso, what was his misstep? What ethical guideline did he
break?
21. ETHICS DISCUSSION:
EXHUMATION STORY
• Did the reporter, Marco Vernaschi make a mistake?
• Ifso, what was his misstep? What ethical guideline did he
break?
• What (if anything) could or should he have done differently?
22. ETHICS DISCUSSION:
EXHUMATION STORY
• Did the reporter, Marco Vernaschi make a mistake?
• Ifso, what was his misstep? What ethical guideline did he
break?
• What (if anything) could or should he have done differently?
• What (if anything) did he do well?
23. ETHICS DISCUSSION:
EXHUMATION STORY
• Did the reporter, Marco Vernaschi make a mistake?
• Ifso, what was his misstep? What ethical guideline did he
break?
• What (if anything) could or should he have done differently?
• What (if anything) did he do well?
• Present& discuss an ethical challenge you’ve encountered in
your own reporting.
27. VISUAL ETHICS
Editing should maintain the integrity of the photographic
images' content and context. Do not manipulate images or
add or alter sound in any way that can mislead viewers or
misrepresent subjects. ---NPPA Ethics Code
28. VISUAL ETHICS
Editing should maintain the integrity of the photographic
images' content and context. Do not manipulate images or
add or alter sound in any way that can mislead viewers or
misrepresent subjects. ---NPPA Ethics Code
29. PROF. MCFARLING’S
5 COMMANDMENTS
I. Thou shalt not make stuff up
II.Thou shalt not plagiarize
III.Thou shalt not be too lazy to make that extra call
IV.Thou shalt not use quotations directly from press
releases
V.Thou shalt not use material from the Internet without
verifying it.
37. CODEC
THE ‘CONTAINER’
•H.264
•Apple ProRes 422 (LT)
•DVCPRO HD 720p
‘TRANSCODING’ = CHANGING THE CODEC
38. FILE TYPE
.MOV = Apple, Quicktime, Final Cut
.AVI = PC, VLC, Adobe Premiere
.MP4 = Compressing
39. COMPRESSION
SOFTWARE
QuickTime Pro (Mac) = $35
Compressor (Mac) = Part of Final Cut Suite (in 306)
MPEG Streamclip (Both) = Free!
Adobe Media Encoder (Both) = Part of Premiere (in 302)
40. COMPRESSION
MAKING THE FILE SMALLER
FOR THE INTERNET
Video Codec: H.264
Audio Codec: AAC Audio
Frame Rate: Native (don’t change it)
Data Rate: 2000 kbits/sec for SD or 5000 kbits/sec for HD
Resolution: 640 x 480 for SD or 1280 x 720 for HD
Deinterlace: Yes
Audio: 320 kbps/44.1 kHz (or 48 kHz if that’s how you recorded)
Format: MP4 (or MOV)
42. FEEDBACK CARDS
★What worked today?
★What didn’t work today?
★What do you want more of in the future?
Editor's Notes
Plan for today.\n6:00-6:15\n*Answer general questions\n*Today’s Agenda\n*Talk about assignments for next week\n*Intro Joy & why we’re talking to her\n6:15-7 Joy\n7-7:15 Break\n7:15-8:30 Ethics\n8:30-9:45 Capturing & Editing\n9:45-9:50 Feedback Cards\n
\n
Joy: 6:15-7pm\nwe introduce how & why we know her; how we met her - the week we spent, why - response we got from the video\nshe introduces herself and talks a bit - and give us an update of how your life has changed since a year ago.\n\nthen Q&A with the class\n\nOur students are all working on character-driven stories; some about pretty personal topics. they’ve heard a lot from us, from the journo perspective - but we want to give the chance to hear from the other side of the story.\n\nWas this the first time you ever had a story told about you like this? What was your first thought when you were asked to participate? Why did you say yes? What were you expecting? How was the actual experience different (if at all)? What was your favorite part of the process, what was your least favorite part? Did anything in your life change as a result? Did you expect that it would? What did you think of the final product? Have your feelings about it changed since the first time you saw it?  Were you surprised by any of what we chose to put in the movie? Did you remember saying everything you said? Did you like/dislike the way you were portrayed -- did you feel it was fair? Accurate? How would you have made the movie differently if you were making it yourself?  Has this changed the way you watch media?\n\nWhat do you think about the way homelessness is typically treated in the media? Did this seem like a different type of story?\n\nDo you have any questions for us that you never got to ask?\n\nHow are Keiosha and Deiosha? What was the experience like for them? Deiosha seemed really interested in the production side--has anything come out of that?\n\nPhoto business? Interesting thing that didn’t make it into the story--what is it, and what’s the status?\n\n
7:15-7:30\n
\n
7:15-7:45\n\n*What stood out - what did you have questions about - what seems obvious?\n*All pretty vague: no rules - just guidelines.\n*But NOT everything is grey.  Some things we never do.\n*Verification * Question Sources’ Motives * Be Open-Minded\n*Attention to children, grievers * Private vs. Public People\n*Conflict of Interest * Gifts * Secondary employment\n*Invite dialogue * Correct Mistakes\n\n--sfx/audio: divide between Australia & US\n
7:15-7:45 \nTalk through Code (what most outlets use or build from--you are expected to know this code and conduct yourself according to it in class)\n*What isn’t there (transparency/self-criticism/community involvement or interaction)\n*What do we mean by “Transparency?”\n--reveal bias/funding/pre-conceived opinions (use Sex in City of Joy example/Daysha example)\n*What do we mean by “Self-Criticism?”\n--if you’re unsure ask/discuss it/reveal it (Grant Fuller and the UN/Lamyaa)\n*Can you imagine ethical dilemmas you might face in your reporting?/Have you faced ethical dilemmas in your own life and how did you deal with them?\nYOUR SOURCES WILL ALWAYS BE A LITTLE UNHAPPY WITH YOU AT THE END OF A STORY (THAT MEANS YOU’VE DONE YOUR JOB WELL--BUT IT ALSO MEANS YOU HAVE TO KNOW YOUR STUFF).\nAs a freelancer you are responsible for your own credibility and brand (and probably won’t be saturated in a newsroom culture)\n
7:15-7:45 \nTalk through Code (what most outlets use or build from--you are expected to know this code and conduct yourself according to it in class)\n*What isn’t there (transparency/self-criticism/community involvement or interaction)\n*What do we mean by “Transparency?”\n--reveal bias/funding/pre-conceived opinions (use Sex in City of Joy example/Daysha example)\n*What do we mean by “Self-Criticism?”\n--if you’re unsure ask/discuss it/reveal it (Grant Fuller and the UN/Lamyaa)\n*Can you imagine ethical dilemmas you might face in your reporting?/Have you faced ethical dilemmas in your own life and how did you deal with them?\nYOUR SOURCES WILL ALWAYS BE A LITTLE UNHAPPY WITH YOU AT THE END OF A STORY (THAT MEANS YOU’VE DONE YOUR JOB WELL--BUT IT ALSO MEANS YOU HAVE TO KNOW YOUR STUFF).\nAs a freelancer you are responsible for your own credibility and brand (and probably won’t be saturated in a newsroom culture)\n
7:15-7:45 \nTalk through Code (what most outlets use or build from--you are expected to know this code and conduct yourself according to it in class)\n*What isn’t there (transparency/self-criticism/community involvement or interaction)\n*What do we mean by “Transparency?”\n--reveal bias/funding/pre-conceived opinions (use Sex in City of Joy example/Daysha example)\n*What do we mean by “Self-Criticism?”\n--if you’re unsure ask/discuss it/reveal it (Grant Fuller and the UN/Lamyaa)\n*Can you imagine ethical dilemmas you might face in your reporting?/Have you faced ethical dilemmas in your own life and how did you deal with them?\nYOUR SOURCES WILL ALWAYS BE A LITTLE UNHAPPY WITH YOU AT THE END OF A STORY (THAT MEANS YOU’VE DONE YOUR JOB WELL--BUT IT ALSO MEANS YOU HAVE TO KNOW YOUR STUFF).\nAs a freelancer you are responsible for your own credibility and brand (and probably won’t be saturated in a newsroom culture)\n
7:15-7:45 \nTalk through Code (what most outlets use or build from--you are expected to know this code and conduct yourself according to it in class)\n*What isn’t there (transparency/self-criticism/community involvement or interaction)\n*What do we mean by “Transparency?”\n--reveal bias/funding/pre-conceived opinions (use Sex in City of Joy example/Daysha example)\n*What do we mean by “Self-Criticism?”\n--if you’re unsure ask/discuss it/reveal it (Grant Fuller and the UN/Lamyaa)\n*Can you imagine ethical dilemmas you might face in your reporting?/Have you faced ethical dilemmas in your own life and how did you deal with them?\nYOUR SOURCES WILL ALWAYS BE A LITTLE UNHAPPY WITH YOU AT THE END OF A STORY (THAT MEANS YOU’VE DONE YOUR JOB WELL--BUT IT ALSO MEANS YOU HAVE TO KNOW YOUR STUFF).\nAs a freelancer you are responsible for your own credibility and brand (and probably won’t be saturated in a newsroom culture)\n
7:15-7:45 \nTalk through Code (what most outlets use or build from--you are expected to know this code and conduct yourself according to it in class)\n*What isn’t there (transparency/self-criticism/community involvement or interaction)\n*What do we mean by “Transparency?”\n--reveal bias/funding/pre-conceived opinions (use Sex in City of Joy example/Daysha example)\n*What do we mean by “Self-Criticism?”\n--if you’re unsure ask/discuss it/reveal it (Grant Fuller and the UN/Lamyaa)\n*Can you imagine ethical dilemmas you might face in your reporting?/Have you faced ethical dilemmas in your own life and how did you deal with them?\nYOUR SOURCES WILL ALWAYS BE A LITTLE UNHAPPY WITH YOU AT THE END OF A STORY (THAT MEANS YOU’VE DONE YOUR JOB WELL--BUT IT ALSO MEANS YOU HAVE TO KNOW YOUR STUFF).\nAs a freelancer you are responsible for your own credibility and brand (and probably won’t be saturated in a newsroom culture)\n
7:15-7:45 \nTalk through Code (what most outlets use or build from--you are expected to know this code and conduct yourself according to it in class)\n*What isn’t there (transparency/self-criticism/community involvement or interaction)\n*What do we mean by “Transparency?”\n--reveal bias/funding/pre-conceived opinions (use Sex in City of Joy example/Daysha example)\n*What do we mean by “Self-Criticism?”\n--if you’re unsure ask/discuss it/reveal it (Grant Fuller and the UN/Lamyaa)\n*Can you imagine ethical dilemmas you might face in your reporting?/Have you faced ethical dilemmas in your own life and how did you deal with them?\nYOUR SOURCES WILL ALWAYS BE A LITTLE UNHAPPY WITH YOU AT THE END OF A STORY (THAT MEANS YOU’VE DONE YOUR JOB WELL--BUT IT ALSO MEANS YOU HAVE TO KNOW YOUR STUFF).\nAs a freelancer you are responsible for your own credibility and brand (and probably won’t be saturated in a newsroom culture)\n
7:15-7:45 \nTalk through Code (what most outlets use or build from--you are expected to know this code and conduct yourself according to it in class)\n*What isn’t there (transparency/self-criticism/community involvement or interaction)\n*What do we mean by “Transparency?”\n--reveal bias/funding/pre-conceived opinions (use Sex in City of Joy example/Daysha example)\n*What do we mean by “Self-Criticism?”\n--if you’re unsure ask/discuss it/reveal it (Grant Fuller and the UN/Lamyaa)\n*Can you imagine ethical dilemmas you might face in your reporting?/Have you faced ethical dilemmas in your own life and how did you deal with them?\nYOUR SOURCES WILL ALWAYS BE A LITTLE UNHAPPY WITH YOU AT THE END OF A STORY (THAT MEANS YOU’VE DONE YOUR JOB WELL--BUT IT ALSO MEANS YOU HAVE TO KNOW YOUR STUFF).\nAs a freelancer you are responsible for your own credibility and brand (and probably won’t be saturated in a newsroom culture)\n
7:15-7:45 \nElicit: What does attribution mean?\n\nTwo things: Giving people credit for their work\nPhotographers, Stringers (but not editors or sources)\n\nSaying where your information comes from.\n
7:15-7:45\n
Questions on next slide. 7:45-8:10 for reading, small groups - then 8:10-8:30 to discuss.\n
7:45-8:30 for full discussion\nQuick summary of what happened, what the discussion we read was about.\n\nForm small groups - count off to mix up the crowd.\nAssign one person to report back to the class on your discussion\nTalk through the above questions\n\nStart with talking about the story/blogs. At the end, think about your own reporting.\nThere is surely something you’re not quite clear on. Present it to the group & discuss.\nPersonal: power/$, using your friends, getting permission, accepting gifts, staying on a fishing boat...\n\nWe’ll take about 10 minutes to talk and then do reportbacks.\n
7:45-8:30 for full discussion\nQuick summary of what happened, what the discussion we read was about.\n\nForm small groups - count off to mix up the crowd.\nAssign one person to report back to the class on your discussion\nTalk through the above questions\n\nStart with talking about the story/blogs. At the end, think about your own reporting.\nThere is surely something you’re not quite clear on. Present it to the group & discuss.\nPersonal: power/$, using your friends, getting permission, accepting gifts, staying on a fishing boat...\n\nWe’ll take about 10 minutes to talk and then do reportbacks.\n
7:45-8:30 for full discussion\nQuick summary of what happened, what the discussion we read was about.\n\nForm small groups - count off to mix up the crowd.\nAssign one person to report back to the class on your discussion\nTalk through the above questions\n\nStart with talking about the story/blogs. At the end, think about your own reporting.\nThere is surely something you’re not quite clear on. Present it to the group & discuss.\nPersonal: power/$, using your friends, getting permission, accepting gifts, staying on a fishing boat...\n\nWe’ll take about 10 minutes to talk and then do reportbacks.\n
7:45-8:30 for full discussion\nQuick summary of what happened, what the discussion we read was about.\n\nForm small groups - count off to mix up the crowd.\nAssign one person to report back to the class on your discussion\nTalk through the above questions\n\nStart with talking about the story/blogs. At the end, think about your own reporting.\nThere is surely something you’re not quite clear on. Present it to the group & discuss.\nPersonal: power/$, using your friends, getting permission, accepting gifts, staying on a fishing boat...\n\nWe’ll take about 10 minutes to talk and then do reportbacks.\n
7:45-8:30 for full discussion\nQuick summary of what happened, what the discussion we read was about.\n\nForm small groups - count off to mix up the crowd.\nAssign one person to report back to the class on your discussion\nTalk through the above questions\n\nStart with talking about the story/blogs. At the end, think about your own reporting.\nThere is surely something you’re not quite clear on. Present it to the group & discuss.\nPersonal: power/$, using your friends, getting permission, accepting gifts, staying on a fishing boat...\n\nWe’ll take about 10 minutes to talk and then do reportbacks.\n
Can’t ignore talking about some of the great current examples of murky journalistic ethics on display in the news.\n\n*Anyone think of examples?\n*Economist\n--What do you think?\n--Why unethical?\n--How could they have handled this better?\n\nEditing should maintain the integrity of the photographic images' content and context. Do not manipulate images or add or alter sound in any way that can mislead viewers or misrepresent subjects.\n\n*Wikileaks\n--Endangering sources/troops\n\n*McChrystal/Rolling Stone\n--Getting too close to sources (embedding)\n\n
Can’t ignore talking about some of the great current examples of murky journalistic ethics on display in the news.\n\n*Anyone think of examples?\n*Economist\n--What do you think?\n--Why unethical?\n--How could they have handled this better?\n\nEditing should maintain the integrity of the photographic images' content and context. Do not manipulate images or add or alter sound in any way that can mislead viewers or misrepresent subjects.\n\n*Wikileaks\n--Endangering sources/troops\n\n*McChrystal/Rolling Stone\n--Getting too close to sources (embedding)\n\n
Can’t ignore talking about some of the great current examples of murky journalistic ethics on display in the news.\n\n*Anyone think of examples?\n*Economist\n--What do you think?\n--Why unethical?\n--How could they have handled this better?\n\nEditing should maintain the integrity of the photographic images' content and context. Do not manipulate images or add or alter sound in any way that can mislead viewers or misrepresent subjects.\n\n*Wikileaks\n--Endangering sources/troops\n\n*McChrystal/Rolling Stone\n--Getting too close to sources (embedding)\n\n
Can’t ignore talking about some of the great current examples of murky journalistic ethics on display in the news.\n\n*Anyone think of examples?\n*Economist\n--What do you think?\n--Why unethical?\n--How could they have handled this better?\n\nEditing should maintain the integrity of the photographic images' content and context. Do not manipulate images or add or alter sound in any way that can mislead viewers or misrepresent subjects.\n\n*Wikileaks\n--Endangering sources/troops\n\n*McChrystal/Rolling Stone\n--Getting too close to sources (embedding)\n\n
You may have heard this if you’re in her other class, but worth refreshing.\n\nIf you haven’t taken Ethics we’ll just touch on it briefly. Later on in the course we’ll have a more involved class on emerging ethical issues in the shifting media landscape.\n\nIn the meantime, if you have doubts ask us and refer to SPJ code.\n
Done By 10:45\nBang Bang Club\n(Did it seem like Terri Gross was nervous?)\n(Did anyone see the movie? Made me have lots of feeling. Hated parts of it, woke up thinking about other parts--talk about the father telling the story of son’s death, talk about the callousness of the way the talked about what they were doing)\n\nLike being a soldier?\n\nEthics (developing them as an individual instead of as a part of an organization--freelancer/entrepreneurial reality)\n\nThe Lucky Voyeur\n\nNever get in trouble for a humanitarian act? Do you agree with that? What does that mean?\n\nWhy do you think these guys (or at least one of these guys) keep going back after so many close calls and severe injuries?\n\nDo you know the story of this photo?\n-let’s talk about it\n
\n
We’re going to dive into hands on, but before we do, a few minutes of lecture\n\nThere are literally millions of work flows.  No single one is right. Depends on the camera you have, the software, where its going to be played.\nThere are a few main variables you should understand.\n\n
What your camera records onto\nDetermines Whether you just copy files or have to capture them in real time\nPluses and Minuses of each\n\n
Two sizes of HD, One size of SD (also widescreen SD) \nStill photos\nEverything is moving into 16:9 world. Best way to go.\nFor refugees project I had to crop my stills. You can put a black bar on the sides\n\n
Long story short, it doesn’t really matter, just keep it the same\n\nThis p means progressive\ni means interlaced\nDon’t worry about it!\n\n\n
Always shoot the same and match the way you shot when you import and edit.\n\n
There are literally hundreds of these but\nH.264 is magic -- what lets the HDSLR’s work\nProRes is for using H.264 footage in FCP\nSo is DVCPRO HD 720p, so its smaller (remember -- what does 720p mean?)\n
MOV is what comes out of DSLR’s \n\n
You can use any of these to compress\nThe settings will be the same\n\n
These are the settings vimeo recommends\n\n
Give them the handout with what they’re supposed to do \n\n