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Robert Grigsby Wilson

Editor - LA/NYC/BOSTON - MPEG Local 700

  • Work
  • Reel
  • Bio
  • IMDb
  • contact

What I'm Working On: "Ambling Alp" by Yeasayer

[vimeo http://vimeo.com/7835527 w=600&h=350] WOW!

About six months ago I was introduced by my friend to the awesome directing duo Radical Friend to talk about some projects they were working on and about possibly helping them out as their editor. We got through one as-yet-unreleased project and then set forth on their biggest project to date: a music video for Yeasayer's song "Ambling Alp." The job was nothing close to simple, due to an accelerated schedule and incredible creative and technical needs on the part of the crew. I can't say enough about how everyone was to work with.

The project was shot with the RED camera and I managed the complete workflow through editing and into coloring and VFX. After production wrapped, we transcoded our almost nine hours of footage using RedRushes into Quarter-Res Debayer ProRes HQ Quicktimes at 1080p. In retrospect, the right thing to do here would've been to encode to 720p quicktimes, because for some reason Final Cut Pro doesn't play nicely with 1080p on external monitors.

I then copied our offline media to two separate external FW800 drives and gave both the same name.  Radical Friend then received one drive and I retained one for myself, setting forth on the editing process. After logging, syncing, and grouping were completed, RF and I both took a stab at creating our own videos. We would email each other cuts back and forth, exchanging ideas fluidly by simply exchanging FCP project files that linked to the media on each of our computers. Because the file path to the media on each computer was the same, we never had to relink any media, or as Scott Simmons calls it, "the reconnection dance".

With our deadline fast approaching, we sent our locked offline sequence on a path to be uprez'd. We had to relink our media to our original RED QT proxies to be able to recreate a full-debayer 1080p sequence, so we exported an XML of the sequence and, using Clipfinder, conformed the sequence to the Full-Quality (_"F") QT Proxies in the R3D folders. We then reimported that XML in FCP and sent that to Apple Color for the expressed purpose of creating high-rez quicktime files of our source media.  Once that finished, I sent that sequence back to Final Cut Pro and voilà, I had my full-raster 1080p sequence for coloring.

Here were the tricky parts, though.  Three things snagged us because of the workflow we were following.

The first was a simple problem: spanned RED files in FCP.  To solve that, I easily ran the ColorFixer program on my Color project file.  This is a must before you do any work in Color.

The second was the aspect ratio sizes.  Because we cut our offline sequence with all 1080p media, we never had to deal with the different aspect ratios that are delivered with the RED.  The camera/build we used delivered us 4k, 3k, and 2k media.  That meant that the relative geometry of our clips were all over the place because we had everything scaled to 100% of their image size, due to all our offline media clips being 100% and uniform in their aspect ratios. Therefore, once I sent the sequence to Color, I went into the geometry room and had to manually re-enter the correct image size adjustments to make sure each image rendered at full-frame.

The last problem was the way Color reads RED files.  For obvious reasons, rendering out handles on the media created all the handles at the tail of the shot, but none at the head.  This was extremely troublesome and I can't wait until they fix that.  Once I sent the sequence back to Final Cut Pro, I had to slip each shot by hand to make sure it matched the offline edit.  Needless to say, it shouldn't be designed this way.

Fortunately, though it wall worked out in the end.  Thanks to everyone's hard work and the incredible guidance and creativity of Radical Friend, this video has had the most amazing response. I just heard from RF that the video has been counted as one of the Top 20 Music Videos of 2009 by Spin Magazine!!! I even found it on Kanye West's blog.

Isn't the internet amazing?

UPDATE: We screened our film at The Hammer Museum in Westwood on December 17th.  Michel Gondry debuted his latest music video with Mia Doi Todd and even played drums in her concert after the screening.  Totally awesome! Check out this link to see all the videos screened!

UPDATE #2: Radical Friend is interviewed by Pitchfork for their Director's Cut series!

tags: day job, editing, editor, final cut pro, music video, post production, promotion, radical friend, visual effects, work, yeasayer
categories: Music Video, What I'm Working On
Monday 12.28.09
Posted by Robert Wilson
 

What I'm Working On: Prego Movie Trailer

[vimeo 7599482 w=600&h=340] This is an (unfinished) trailer for a short film called Prego that my friend Tim recommended me for. The project got put on hold, but I thought my version 1 was good enough to put up as an example of my abilities as a trailer editor.

tags: editor, italy, movie trailer, post production, prego, robgwilson, short film, trailer
categories: Trailers, What I'm Working On
Friday 11.13.09
Posted by Robert Wilson
 

Freddy and Francine: Live At The Mint!

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AjJwI0ZaNgc&w=480&h=300&fmt=18] [youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E2f8Utr8ZOA&w=480&h=300&fmt=18]

Back again after an extended blogging layoff because of work and projects!  Coming up for air long enough to point you to the latest installment of What I've Been Working On.

Freddy and Francine is an awesome band and friends of robgwilson.com after their music was featured in a short film I edited called Chris And Steve (IMDb).  You can check out more about them here and here.  In June their song Brownstone Alley was featured on KCRW's Morning Becomes Eclectic as their Top Tune Of The Day, which is only the coolest thing ever.  In case you don't live in Los Angeles, KCRW and that show in particular is the best place to find great new music in the city of Los Angeles.

So F&F and I got together and decided to up the ante on their video work online.  With the help of my friends Adam Deyoe and Katie Goldschmidt, the three of us got together to shoot a concert at The Mint in Hollywood.  Dating back to 1937, the venue has hosted everyone from Stevie Wonder, Willie Dixon, and Ray Charles to more recently Ben Harper, Macy Gray, and The Wallflowers.

These two videos, 8 Pages and Brownstone Alley, were the first two songs from their set, with more to come.  Hopefully we'll be working together again soon.  They're a pleasure and their music is kickass.  Go see them if you get the chance.

tags: 8 pages, brownstone alley, concert, editing, final cut pro, freddy and francine, kcrw, los angeles, morning becomes eclectic, music video, post production, promotion, the mint, top tune of the day
categories: Music Video, Reels & Publicity, What I'm Working On
Thursday 08.27.09
Posted by Robert Wilson
 

Ill Doctrine is awesome and you should know.

Let it just be said that Jay Smooth/Ill Doctrine may be one of the smartest people/blogs on the internet and he/it definitely deserves his/its own TV show.  It's amazing how an articulate person with a little bit of technology can create meaningful dialogue in ways that were never possible until this century.  He gets my utmost respect and I think you should know about him.  I've posted a couple primer videos that are my favorites.  Here is his most recent post giving his own primer: Ill Doctrine/Allow Me to Reintroduce Myself.  Here's a link to the NPR story too.  Keep up the good work, J.  If you ever need help with your videos, I'm out there for ya. [youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q6kIMiNJQRY&feature=player_embedded]

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0TpmJgSfZ_8&feature=player_embedded]

categories: Grassroots Media, What I'm Looking At
Tuesday 06.30.09
Posted by Robert Wilson
 

Movie Business = Music Business minus 5 years?

Interesting post from the ever-excellent Silicon Alley Insider: Sorry, There's No Way To Save The TV Business...

As with print-based media, Internet-based distribution generates only a tiny fraction of the revenue and profit that today's incumbent cable, broadcast, and satellite distribution models do.  As Internet-based distribution gains steam, therefore, most TV industry incumbents will no longer be able to support their existing cost structures.

Here's the gist: we're all going to be out of work in five years.  Well, that's a bit of an exaggeration, but the truth is that I don't see much of a future for the industry.  THAT IS NOT TO SAY THAT I DON'T LOVE THE BUSINESS AND WANT TO DO THIS FOREVER, but the fact of the matter is, especially with post-production, job levels are taking a nose-dive and revenue streams are not far behind it.  I mean, we already have internet-equipped televisions, internet video on the rise, and more people then ever on the internet, so the technology is there.  How long before the industry has the rug pulled out from under us, just like the newspaper and record industry?

And things are already dead in this town.  What from the Writer's Strike, the SAG "strike", and the down economy, I can't image jobs ever getting back to the levels they were at when I first moved out here.  I don't want to say that we'll never find a way to work, but if you've got any ideas, I suggest you pick up the phone and call some industry executives, because they want to know.

Quick link to a recent episode of KCRW's The Business: Below The Line and Under The Gun.  It's probably the best description of the job market facing us below-the-line'rs in this town.  Only problem is that it doesn't even address the job market for post-production, because with the addition of technology to all these problems, editorial staffs have gone from double-digit crews to maybe two or three people for multi-million dollar projects! You want to talk about too much supply vs. demand, here is your example #1!

I'd love to hear what anyone has to say about this.  Hell, talk me down if you think I'm crazy.  I would love for someone to make me feel better about this.  Please comment!

tags: apple, big tech, bittorrent, cable, day job, film, hollywood, hulu, independent film, internet series, iTunes, kcrw, los angeles, media, movie, networks, online, post production, rants and raves, silicon alley insider, television, the business, time to find new work, tv, union, video, we're all screwed, work, youtube
categories: Hollywood Deathwatch, What I'm Looking At
Wednesday 06.17.09
Posted by Robert Wilson
 

Amy K. Harmon Reel 2009

Her Private Practice Scenes:[vimeo 4751713]

Her Complete Reel: [vimeo 4737204]

Amy Harmon is a friend of mine and a great actress. She was recently featured in "Private Practice" and the pilot "Inside The Box", both for ABC, and in the Brimmer Street Theater Company's original production of "<3". Get more information on that at brimmerstreet.org

Her reel is a fairly standard edit I do, employing simple dips to black between scenes and sometimes employing an occasional re-edit to focus the scene on my client.

tags: abc, brimmer street theater company, editing, film, inside the box, private practice, promotion, publicity, reel, theater
categories: Reels & Publicity, What I'm Working On
Thursday 06.11.09
Posted by Robert Wilson
 

David Doesn't Dance

Just a little nice piece to embarrass my friend.  Let this be a warning to all your drunk dancers.  Don't let me get my hands on that footage.  :) [vimeo 4738745]

tags: dance, david, editing, editor, music video, sexy back
categories: Reels & Publicity, What I'm Working On
Thursday 06.11.09
Posted by Robert Wilson
 

What I'm Working On: Milo

This documentary was my BFA thesis film at Emerson College. The film details a moment in the life of Milo Matthews, a subway musician in Boston. He struggles with his past and his career, all while the city cracks down on subways musicians as a potential security threat in a post-9/11 world. We travel to his home and to visit his son in Seattle, getting a glimpse of the sacrifices that people make to pursue their dreams. You can check out Milo on myspace.com/milomatthews and at lovelifemusic.com. He's a great man and I'm forever thankful of how he opened up his life to me.

Also special thanks to Robert Kellough, who mixed the film but is absent from the credits.

[vimeo 4190218]

tags: 9/11, art, artist, bfa, boston, busker, busking, documentary, editing, emerson college, mbta, milo, milo matthews, music, musician, paranoia, robert kellough, seattle, subway, thesis
categories: Reels & Publicity, What I'm Working On
Friday 04.17.09
Posted by Robert Wilson
 

What I'm Working On: J. Claude Deering - Reel 2009

Claude and I have been great friends since elementary school. I've been doing his reel for years and I'm always impressed with his work. His reel is called a "speed reel" where all his scenes are chopped up and reorganized to create one sequence that jumps back and forth as the drama works best. This is different compared to Mike Terry's reel which is a collection of independent scenes.

Clips from this reel are from Entourage, Criminal Minds, and the internet comedy series "Untitled Sketch Group", available at FunnyOrDie.com. He's soon to be featured on the upcoming film "The Ugly Truth" and in "Inside The Box", a pilot for ABC.

[vimeo 4185561]

tags: criminal minds, editing, entourage, funny or die, inside the box, J- Claude Deering, reel, speed reel, the ugly truth, untitled sketch group
categories: Reels & Publicity, What I'm Working On
Friday 04.17.09
Posted by Robert Wilson
 

Sidenote: 100% Solar Power In Ten Years?

Just a quick post over at excellent source of awesomeness Good Magazine who did an interview with inventor and futurist Ray Kurzweil.  Check out this little nugget of information:

Solar power is, in fact, doubling every two years and has been for 20 years, and we are only eight doublings away from it meeting 100 percent of the world’s energy needs. And we have 10,000 times more sunlight than we need to do this. But we cannot simply implement a circa-2029 infrastructure today. We should use today’s technology aggressively to meet challenges such as clean energy.

This guy has been coming across my radar recently because of the upcoming film Transcendent Man.  He seems like a fascinating character and though I cannot offically endorse all his predictions, he does have a history of being dead-on correct and is a certifiable genius inventor.  And though the trailer clearly seems to be rooted in the let's-rip-off-Errol-Morris school of documentary (albeit a style I love), I'm still really looking forward to seeing it.  Here's the trailer:

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ntY01qoIdus]

tags: environment, future, good magazine, invention, ray kurzweil, solar power, transcendent man
categories: Sidenotes, What I'm Looking At
Friday 04.17.09
Posted by Robert Wilson
 

A quick follow-up...(Thanks Bruce Sharpe!)

Hey everyone.  First of all, a quick thanks to Bruce Sharpe, CEO of Singular Software.  His company made PluralEyes, the company I referenced in my previous Dear Production entry.  A few days ago posted my blog on his twitter feed.  That's big for someone like me who is brand new to this web 2.0 linked economy.  He also recommended a good story about I Love Lucy and how the show really innovated multi-camera production.  You can find Bruce on twitter and on blogspot, and probably at NAB this week.  From his twitter feed:From Bruce Sharpe's Twitter Feed Here's the video I recommended about his company: (I'm just learning how to embed video on Wordpress) [blip.tv ?posts_id=1129108&dest=-1]

Also thanks to Lindsey Rundell, my assistant editor amigo, currently working on .  She read my post and told me about Quickeys, a macros program which should make half of Avid Multi-Grouping easier.  The program allows you to program a series of keystrokes into one keystroke so that, in her words, "It does the F1-6 deal for you AND adds the Aux TC."  It looks like it would be a great help, but nothing is a replacement for proper production techniques.  Thanks Lindsey!

tags: avid, bruce sharpe, day job, Dear Production, editing, film, final cut pro, multi-group, pluraleyes, post production, rants and raves, sync, timecode
categories: Thanks!, What I'm Thinking About
Friday 04.17.09
Posted by Robert Wilson
 

What I'm Working On: Untitled Sketch Group

I have been friends with J. Claude Deering, the writer/director of Untitled Sketch Group, since we were literally children.  Our families are great friends.  So literally, I jumped at the chance to work with him and our friends Chris Frontiero and Jared Swanson.  Turning Entourage on its head, USG is the story of a group of sketch comedians in Los Angeles who dream of success but find little of it.  I am the cinematographer of all four episodes and edited Episodes 2 and 3. Untitled Sketch Group: Episode 1 A local LA sketch group get a meeting with a big agency. Cinematography by Robert Grigsby Wilson.

[embed]http://www.funnyordie.com/videos/d03918b77b/[/embed]

Untitled Sketch Group: Episode 2 The gang pays a visit to Jonathan to make sure he's doing them right... Shot and Edited by Robert Grigsby Wilson.

[embed]http://www.funnyordie.com/videos/1c244b8845/untitled-sketch-group-episode-2-from-untitled-sketch-group?rel=player[/embed]

Untitled Sketch Group: Episode 3 Chris tries to clean up the mess after his hit-and-run accident while Jared and Claude try unsuccessfully to brainstorm new sketch ideas. Shot and Edited by Robert Grigsby Wilson.

[embed]http://www.funnyordie.com/videos/b1dde61f82/untitled-sketch-group-episode-3-from-untitled-sketch-group?rel=player[/embed]

Untitled Sketch Group: Episode 4 The guys from Untitled Sketch Group make a Boost Mobile ad. Cinematography by Robert Grigsby Wilson.

[embed]http://www.funnyordie.com/videos/f330846163/boost-mobile-from-untitled-sketch-group?rel=player[/embed]

The trailer I also edited for USG:

[embed]http://www.funnyordie.com/videos/c1d00560cd/untitled-sketch-group-new-trailer-from-untitled-sketch-group[/embed]

tags: agent, Christopher Frontiero, cinematography, editing, funny or die, internet series, J- Claude Deering, Jared Swanson, Narrative, sketch comedy, untitled sketch group
categories: Comedy, What I'm Working On
Wednesday 04.15.09
Posted by Robert Wilson
 

What I'm Working On: Michael Grant Terry - Reel 2009

[vimeo=http://vimeo.com/4139233] This is a reel I edited for Michael Grant Terry. It showcases some of the editing work I put into a typical reel job. Here, each of his scenes have been edited to refocus the drama on his character. I have been cutting Mike's reels for years now and have seen him grow from an unknown to a common face on television and in commercials. Currently you can see Mike on FOX's Bones as Wendell Bray.  He just emailed me today to say that he'll be on tomorrow night's episode, Wednesday, April 15th at 8pm on FOX, and the season finale, which he believes will air May 14th.  Congrats Mikey!

tags: editing, michael grant terry, post production, promotion, publicity, reel
categories: Reels & Publicity, What I'm Working On
Tuesday 04.14.09
Posted by Robert Wilson
 

Dear Production: JAM SYNC YOUR DAMN CAMERAS!

Okay, I'm not one here to criticize people in production. Post-production is almost a completely different beast from production and I've walked very little in the shoes of the camera department (enough to know I didn't want to do it for a living). That said, DEAR PRODUCTION: JAM SYNC YOUR DAMN CAMERAS!!! For those unaware, jam syncing is a process used by productions when sound is recorded separately or when multiple cameras are shooting the same event. It's used in features, television, music videos, documentary, and especially reality television.  Simply put, the production team uses a machine to send continuous matching timecode to each camera.  Once the footage lands in my hands, that allows me to simply hit "Sync By Timecode", create synced groups with every angle's action lined up, and start editing immediately.  All production has to do is occasionally set their timecodes to match that machine.  Working with it is great...IF it happens.

What production doesn't understand is that if at any point the timecode drifts out-of-sync - at any point - then the amount of time I have to spend syncing clips increases exponentially compared to the amount of time they delay stopping to sync their cameras. And every camera has a tendency to drift out of sync. All too often, they decline to be diligent.  On one project, this showed up during a live-to-tape session where six cameras and an audio recorder were recording the same group meeting.  NONE of these cameras were synced.  Despite the fact that each camera was stationary and the location did not move, there was not even a slate to provide me with a point of sync.  Each clip had to be synced according to some random point in the action.  And that took over two days with a second-shift assistant editor working on it as well.  If they had simply jam synced, this would have taken us minutes, not days.  And I should say that while this was a bad experience, I'd be a rich man if I only had a dollar for every time I had to deal with timecode sync issues.

Here I'll post what some of you may be looking for: Tim Leavitt over at View From The Cutting Room Floor has a great blog post about fool-proof Avid MultiGroups.  That describes the process you have to go through if you're editing in Avid and you have the problems I describe here.  If you're working in Final Cut Pro, here's a great post from our dear friends at the Los Angeles Final Cut Pro User Group (who are totally awesome, let me just say) about syncing multicam clips.  As an added bonus, you should check out this little plug-in gem called PluralEyes.  It's a Final Cut Pro plug-in that scans your audio waveforms and aligns your all your clips in your sequence so that you never have to sync again! It's only in beta phase now, and I've downloaded it but haven't had the chance to use it yet.  I'm looking forward to the opportunity.  This video also has a great explanation of what I'm talking about as far as jam syncing.  Email me if you need any additional help.  I'll see what I can do.

Just to make a final point and show I'm not really just sore about my experiences but that this is really a good idea.  Imagine that this happens on a Michael Bay movie. There's some action sequence that has ten cameras covering some big explosion. Imagine getting all that footage and not having timecode to sync the entire action.  It would be hell to edit, right?  Well, my dear friends in production, please remember: jam sync your damn cameras.

-Rob

tags: avid, Dear Production, editing, final cut pro, grouping, lafcpug, pluraleyes, post production, rants and raves, sync, timecode, view from the cutting room floor
categories: What I'm Thinking About
Tuesday 04.14.09
Posted by Robert Wilson
 

What I'm Working On: Brimmer Street Theater Company - "Severance"

[vimeo=http://vimeo.com/3612808] A montage that played on a loop at an art show fundraiser for the theater company.

[vimeo=http://vimeo.com/4139461]

A promotional reel used by the theater company for marketing and publicity.

These are two promotional films I cut for The Brimmer Street Theater Company's original work "Severance," which premiered in Los Angeles in 2007. The play is based on the premise that the human head lives for ninety seconds after the moment of separation, and in that final moment the mind continues to remember, ponder, and regret.

"For those who feel that theater has grown stale or predictable, here's something different...a coup de theatre." ~Terry Morgan, Variety

tags: brimmer street theater company, editing, los angeles, montage, promotion, publicity, reel, severance, theater
categories: Reels & Publicity, What I'm Working On
Tuesday 04.14.09
Posted by Robert Wilson
 

What I'm Working On: Hitman FX Reel 2008

[vimeo=http://vimeo.com/3481058] Visual effects reel for Huey Carroll and his company Hitman FX.

(i'm posting a few old projects to get the blog history caught up)

tags: editing, hitman fx, huey carroll, reel, vfx, visual effects
categories: Reels & Publicity, What I'm Working On
Tuesday 04.14.09
Posted by Robert Wilson
 

What I'm Working On: Katie Goldschmidt - Reel 2007

Katie Goldschmidt - Reel 2007 [vimeo=http://vimeo.com/4154162]

Katie Goldschmidt is a cinematographer friend of mine. We studied film in Prague together back in college. A couple years ago Katie applied to the AFI Conservatory for Cinematography and commissioned me to edit her reel. She was accepted and just recently graduated. Congrats Katie!

(I'm posting several old projects to get my blog caught up)

tags: afi, american film institute, cinematography, editing, katie goldschmidt, Prague, reel
categories: Reels & Publicity, What I'm Working On
Tuesday 04.14.09
Posted by Robert Wilson
 

What I'm Working On: Every Day (Local 700 baby!)

Every Day Written and Directed by Richard Levine (Nip/Tuck)

Edited by Pam Wise, ACE (Secretary, Transamerica, Then She Found Me)

First Assistant Editor: Robert Grigsby Wilson

Local 700 baby! My first union job. After busting my ass for years trying to get a shot on a union gig, Pam hooked it up and gave me a chance to be her Assistant Editor on her indie feature. I met Pam way back when I was a production assistant for Carl Byker on a PBS Frontline documentary called "The Meth Epidemic," which she edited. We've stayed in touch since then, so now here I am!

The film was shot on the RED Cam, which is basically the "new hotness" of digital filmmaking. It records at 4k resolution (although its quality is frankly debatable) which is comparable in quality to 35mm film. The essential benefit of this is that you can shoot without the constraints of film, film equipment, and film processing on your budget. In addition to that, there was no need for heavy editing equipment either. Pam and I are editing the entire film on our new MacBook Pros and a couple 1 TB drives.

Oh we had problems, but mostly it arised out of not being able to manage the original RED media ourselves. A lab in New York (that shall remain nameless) received all our original media and downconverted everything into DNxHD 36, Avid's new compressed HD codec. In an ideal situation, this would've been fine, since they would have taken that extra step out of my hands. However, this was all during the time when Final Cut Pro had exclusive rights to the SDK for RED, which essentially meant Avid and Red didn't always want to talk to each other correctly. Thus creating huge headaches with converting media, all while trying to stay on schedule. I'd say, if you plan on making your film with the RED, either edit in Final Cut Pro or at least manage all your RED files yourself.

Some RED links: Avid and The Red | Spilling The Beans On The Red One | Avid/Red Forum on Reduser | Peter Jackson shoots RED | Soderberg shoots RED

Not bad for a first entry, eh?

tags: day job, editing, film, independent film, movie, post production, union, work
categories: Day Jobs, What I'm Working On
Friday 01.09.09
Posted by Robert Wilson
 
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See the latest updates: Fancy Dance aquired by Apple Films!