
Tuesday, April 26, 2011
87 pages
Also, I think it's going to be over 100 pages when the story is complete.
Saturday, April 23, 2011
SonRise: Eleventh Time's the Charm
I was in charge of the Triumphal Entry into Jerusalem and The Last Supper scenes. On the day-of that means we make sure the Last Supper props are set up correctly,
Friday, April 22, 2011
SonRise: Before the Dawn
Things haven't gone as smoothly as I would've liked. We had some interesting issues with cast this year: having people show up, working with unique interpretations, dealing with a lot of changes from what we're used to. But I think it's really come together, and God will bless this production one more time.
I really need this SonRise. My spirituality has gone on a vacation, and that's hard to admit when you're the director of two scenes in SonRise. I need to experience this production just as much as the people who have never talked to Jesus before.
I'm praying that we are able to touch as many souls as possible, but I'm also praying that my soul is stirred up and pointed back in the direction it needs to be.
Wednesday, April 20, 2011
Final Project: Accomplished
Our assignment was to make a promo video for some organization in the community. I chose FLAG Camp, which you can learn about in a minute ;)
The process was actually pretty simple. I went out with them on two separate Saturdays, lugging my tripod and borrowed camera. The first day was GORGEOUS. Lots of sun and perfect temperature. The second day was completely overcast and freezing, which is usually good because of the diffused lighting. But in my case, it was not giving me continuity from my first shoot, and the clouds would sometimes part and the sun would kind of shine, which messed up my white balance constantly. Luckily, I had gotten a lot of what I needed the first day, but I still used some of the shots from the second, pumping up the brightness so no one (hopefully) would notice the contrast in color temperature and intensity of light.
Between those main days of shooting, I pre-interviewed and then shot the interviews of three of the main directors of FLAG Camp. The pre-interviewing was really just out of necessity for me because we were required to turn in a script a week before the final video was due. I didn't have time to set up a shoot for them, so I just downloaded a voice recording app on my Droid X and talked to them for like 45 minutes. I then transcribed the quotes I liked and arranged them into an order I liked for my script. And when it came to editing, I was really happy I had a script to follow. It took the work of deciding what it was going to look like off of my shoulders. I already knew. (Thanks Ruf!) I also have a habit of labeling my clips when I go through them for the first time, so that keeps things organized and the clips easily accessible (provided I can remember what I named them!).
Editing is my favorite part, and it went really well--except for a minor scare when the server decided to play hide-and-seek-the-project and mess with my adrenal glands and tear ducts. Ruf saved the day, and all was well with the world. Anyway, the first parts to go in were the sound bites that I had planned out in order. Then it was music-picking time! Annalisa was hanging out with me that day, and we headed to OmniMusic.com, typed in the ridiculous password that Southern chose (to keep everyone from getting their hands on vast-quantities of stock music...?), and started looking for fun songs. We pretty much knew it was the one when we found it. We played with a few, but that one just sounded so fresh, so upbeat.
Then it was intro time! I had a couple clips in mind already, including the opening shot which I had planned as soon as I saw they were wearing their special t-shirts. After the intro came together, it was really pretty simple. Something I had also consciously planned, was matching the words from the sound bites to the images. It may be like a DUH thing to some people, but I guess it was a lesson I realized from this class. So I dug up the images that I thought expressed what they were saying and dropped them in my timeline.
Pretty much all that was left was volume management and color correction. And then I was done! It was probably about ten hours of editing, give or take an hour or two. And maybe 12 hours of shooting, counting set-up and take-down.
So, without further ado, here is my final project.
Things I learned from this project:
1. Kids are hard to shoot! Especially many, many young children.
(A) They do not ask for permission to manhandle your equipment, or they ask and manhandle it anyway. They also like to try to steal tripods and yell into the microphone.
(B) They also move really quickly. Sometimes I felt like I was just throwing the camera in their direction trying to catch something cute.
(C) I don't know how to interview children. The young ones freeze up and don't know how to comprehend English suddenly, and the older ones talk over each other and can't stand still. And I just don't know how to get good answers out of children.
2. Lighting is not my strong point, but I think the main concepts are finally starting to stick to my brain. The lighting for my shoot took forever to set up, because after I set it all up the night before (thanks Michael!), someone walked off with my key light the next morning. Soft-box and all. So I was scrambling and grabbing random people to help me decide if I should just shoot with two or try to finagle a third diffused light somehow. Ruf finally came to the rescue again, and helped me set up another light. Something about it never seemed right, and when I looked at the footage later I didn't like how you can really tell that it's a sheet hanging in the background. Next time I would like to fix that. I think it's decent though, just not super professional-looking.
3. I really enjoy editing :)
Caught up!
Today I was supposed to be at 66.6 pages, and I got to 67! I'm super duper stoked. Yesterday and the day before I finally wrote out what I wanted from the next section, so I'd know where I was going. Then I wrote for most of my four hour shift at work today, and got almost ten pages done! Thus, caught up I am.
I'm really enjoying this challenge! It really is the worst month to do it, but somehow it's working out! And I super loving being a writer. My characters are definitely coming into their own, and the story is just working itself out. I update my roommate on them as if I've been watching a soap opera (the two oldest of which just got cancelled: sad day for stay-at-homers everywhere).
I can already see parts that will need to be re-written, a process that I'm actually looking forward to, even though I didn't think I would. For example, the younger sister needs to have more edge, more teenage flippantness (thanks for reminding Kylee). So that will need to be more apparent in the beginning, and then it'll make more sense that she actually goes through a little bit of a transition, and that you actually realize she has thought about her future and wants to do good things. And as other things come out about the characters (that I didn't even know before), I realize I may need to set them up differently.
Anyway, just wanted to say that I'm really excited about how this is going and how much fun I'm having.
Ciao!
Thursday, April 7, 2011
One fourth!
Wednesday, April 6, 2011
Crawl.
Monday, April 4, 2011
Script Intro
Sunday, April 3, 2011
Script Frenzy Day 3
The basic plot:
We follow two sisters, Emery and Bailey, during separate post-graduation summer adventures, where they learn about love, life, and following their true passions.
Emery has just graduated from college pre-law, and has planned to attend Harvard Law in the fall. Her father is a lawyer, and Emery has always tried to do what everyone else says is right for her. She likes to be in control; she doesn't like chaos. Secretly, she's passionate about dance, but she doesn't like to tell anyone because it doesn't seem to be useful for her plans. She also doesn't want to date anyone because it would just get in the way and cause her to lose focus. She is staying with her aunt and uncle at their house near a Virginia beach for the summer. She's taking a dance class for "exercise." But she's going to meet Oliver, a musician/songwriter who plans not to plan. He goes where the wind blows him. His parents died when he was younger. He wants to connect with people and inspire and be inspired, but he is afraid of staying too close for too long.
Bailey has just graduated high school and along with her two friends is traveling to San Diego for a summer volleyball training program, before they start college there in the fall. Bailey is, under pressure of being a teenager and from her peers, is trying to push her limits, be a little wild. They experiment with a little drinking a little sex, but Bailey starts to realize that it's not fulfilling. She secretly wants to write; she's been writing poetry her whole life. After an incident that injures their car, she takes the car to a shop and meets mid-twenties Phillip, who is working his way through night school. He's a little older, but intrigued by her, sensing that there's more to her than partying like her friends. She is intrigued by him, not into the partying scene and working so hard for his passions. The summer results in some interesting experiences, including a pregnancy scare and learning the hard way about love and relationships.
The sisters are kind of different, and have very different experiences, but in the end they will learn similar lessons and grow as young adults, with at least one of them gaining a love to keep.
I'm excited to have this much planned out! I have 8 pages validated on the website right now, almost to my quota for today. Special thanks to Kylee for fixing my storyline problems and Lexi for helping me with some details :)
Saturday, April 2, 2011
Script Frenzy Day 2
I still haven't written anything exactly, but I'm still developing the characters. I think it's going to be even harder than I thought to fit all this in, but I'm determined to give it a fightin' try!
I'm still mulling things over in my head, sometimes all through the day, so it's not like I'm doing nothing. I'll post soon about my story line!
Almost in a frenzy,
Jana
Tuesday, March 29, 2011
Where'd March go?
So apparently January was blog month for me. But now here I am, on the verge of April, and barely posting again.
I meant to post two blogs about volunteering with Extreme Makeover. That might still happen.
Lately:
SonRise is here again! We're in week three of practices, but for my scene (Last Supper) we're having trouble getting people to show up. We haven't made any of the none-speaking disciples come yet because the focus has just been getting the Jesus actors to memorize their lines, but now it's time to start building the scene! So I hope they show up...
Also, our final digital video production project has been assigned: community promo, and work with a real client. I'm going to try to do mine on Flag Camp, a campus ministry that plays with and worships with kids in low-income housing twice a month. This project is supposed to be one that we put in our portfolios, and it's worth a lot for our final grade, so I hope I can pull off a good one! I wish it was going to be done before my internship interview in Atlanta next week, but my other projects will have to suffice for showing off my skillz.
Last but not least, script frenzy starts this week! I haven't written anything creative, besides music, since junior high, so I'm definitely nervous. But I'm also getting really excited as I develop my characters! The timing of this event couldn't come at a worse time, but I'm gonna do it anyway. Even if I only get half to the goal (100 pages), I will feel accomplished. I'm glad I've gotten a few friends to suffer with me! I'll try to keep this updated on my progress through the month.
Let the chaos begin!
Friday, January 28, 2011
Please, come back for them.
Come for the father who carries his disabled son through triathlons.
Come for the babies whose daddies don't come back from war the same, if at all.
Come back so my friend can see his mom again.
Don't come for me, but for them.
Come for the daughters who think touch equals love.
Come for the ones whose shattered homes cannot show them how to love.
Come back for the one who was so beautiful, then one car collision forever changed what's normal.
Don't come for me, but for them.
Come for the singing African babies, born with a death sentence.
Come for the ones who know nothing but hunger pain and cold concrete, just down the street from my hot chocolate.
Come back for the those who lived in shacks, and now the rubble of shacks.
Don't come for me, but for them.
Wednesday, January 26, 2011
Doubt.
I doubt why He loves me. People say, "He created you, so that's why He loves you."
I don't love everything I create. I know some people who hate what they've created.
Remembering that we are made in His image, that we bear resemblance to God, does help some. That feels pretty special. But it doesn't quite clinch it every time.
So in my mind, just because God created me doesn't mean that He automatically loves me.
But that wasn't all He did.
He could've just let us go about our sinful business, especially after we turned our backs on him, first at the Tree, and then countless times after that. Even after He gave humanity a second change via the ark. We messed up again, and He could've thrown up His hands and let us run a muck, or wiped us all out and started over.
But He didn't. He didn't abandon us, and he didn't give us a mediocre treatment.
He sacrificed His son, His only child, just so that we could be saved from ourselves.
And all I have to do is believe.
Believe through my doubts, that even those can and will be wiped away. Because belief is contagious. It's like anything you practice: the more you practice, the better you are at it. Especially, it seems, when you share it with someone else.
I think that's been one of my problems lately. I haven't been connecting with many people on a spiritual level. And isn't that the most important one? I know it is, but this thing called University Living gets in the way, but I'm tired of that being an excuse.
I'm also tired of the Adventist bubble. (This post should probably be separated into three, whups.) This has been on my mind a lot lately, and my friends seem to agree. I have never done anything outside the SDA world, except a one-week theater camp when I was 13. Don't get me wrong, I love Adventists, I believe in Adventism and our institutions, I am grateful for all my experiences and my upbringing, and that I have been kept safe in the bubble all this time. But I think it really stunts my growth sometimes. I don't want that to be an excuse, but I'm tired of trying the same old things and getting the same non- or blah-results.
A friend has encouraged me to go back to the basics. And when tempted with sin, to not focus on the sin itself, but the voice in my head that tells me I'm not worthy of God's love.
"Submit yourselves, then, to God. Resist the devil, and he will flee from you." -James 4:7
The Message paraphrase says to "Yell a loud no to the Devil and watch him scamper." I like the imagery of a weak devil.
This is a little ramble-y, but I've just been working through some thoughts. Your suggestions and prayers and testimonies are welcome :)
Tuesday, January 18, 2011
Tangibility.
I can't cut the habit of twirling my hair in my fingers.
I love playing my guitar really loud and feeling it vibrate against my body.
I have a bad habit of fingering the remaining pages of whatever book I'm reading.
I used to crunch massive quantities of ice.
My number one love language is physical touch.
I'm also very into the other senses:
I have to smell new foods before I try them (IF I try them!).
I love to taste my favorites foods!
I love designing and appreciate good design, as well as using as many colors in my wardrobe and on my homework (what am I, in third grade? =P).
Music is most definitely at the core of who I am.
One word: skydiving!
I don't know if everyone else relishes being in tune to their senses, but I certainly do. We discussed in a class recently that the more sensory an experience, the fuller it is and the more it means to you.
I think this is one reason that, at least for me, it's so hard to trust God. He's not tangible. I can't enjoy touching Him; I can't smell Him before I take Him in; I can't hear what He says to me. As someone who relies on and enjoys my senses (I just twirled my hair), it's hard to rely on someone whom I can't sense.
Or can I?
Have I not stared out over a valley or a waterfall, in awe of what my Creator created for me to see?
Have I not felt God's presence when someone comforted me with a hug in rough times?
Have I not been in awe of the endless varieties of foods and combinations of tastes?
How many times have smells triggered powerful memories of spending time with God in the mountains?
Has a piece of music not stirred to me to tears, praising God for the beauty that I can hear?
Better yet, how many times has someone encouraged me or preached a sermon that has changed my heart?
Touched my heart?
That's the best sense.
And to take this one step further, from an earlier post, I can apply this verse:
"Therefore, whether you eat or drink, or whatever you do, do all to the glory of God."
1 Corinthians 10:21