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Family Legacy Video workshops teach video biography tips, tricks and techniques. |
Okay, "fantastic Photoshop feats" may be overly gilding the lily - but we do
promise to demonstrate techniques to help you enhance the looks of the photos
you include in your video biographies. Dan Crapsi has been honing his Photoshop
skills and is particularly excited about showing you how to give black and white
photos a beautiful, hand painted look.
In addition, you'll learn how to plan and organize your video bio, how to
compose questions and then ask them effectively once the videotaping begins.
You'll also leave knowing how to import video into your computer editing
software and you'll learn some ideas for how to shape that video into a video
biography that is sure to be a family legacy.
And, for those of you interested in video biographies as a business, a special
one-day session will address your concerns.
Don't wait to register! Seating is limited to 20. The early bird deadline is
February 29.
Create Your Own Video Biography (April 25-27): A comprehensive introduction to
the video biography production process. Leave this three-day event with the
inspiration and information you need to start your own video biography project.
The Business of Video Biographies (April 28): Steve Pender shares his experience
in the video bio business and answers your questions.
Like to learn more? You'll find complete information on the Family Legacy Video
Web site's
workshop page.
See you in April!
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Family
Legacy Video's Steve Pender is featured in a video bio broadcast & at a local
genealogy club. |
"Arizona Spotlight," a radio program broadcast Fridays over Tucson's NPR
stations KUAZ-AM/FM, offers a range of features on a variety of topics. On
Friday, December 21, the show offered a segment featuring video biographies.
Family Legacy Video's Steve Pender was the star of the piece, which ran over
seven minutes long. In an interview taped with host Mark McLemore the week before the
show aired, Steve shared the story of how Family Legacy Video came to be, talked
about the benefits of video biographies and offered some tech tips for budding
video biographers.
You'll find the segment posted on the radio page of the Family Legacy Video Web site.
Please give it a listen and let us know what you think!
On December 6, Steve was the featured speaker at the holiday luncheon of the
SaddleBrooke Genealogy Club, in SaddleBrooke, Arizona. Steve told the Family
Legacy Video story, explained what video biographies are, treated the audience
to video bio examples and answered questions from the club's members. According to
member feedback, the program was very well received. In the photo at left, Steve
poses with the club's program chairman, Richard McQuate (l), and president Phil
Noll (r).
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Some
inspiration to start 2008. |
"The work that personal historians do is sacred. It's the work of the soul. It's
blissful and heartfelt work."
So said James Walsh as he began his presentation at the conference of the
Association of Personal Historians on November 11, 2007. Walsh teaches history
at the University of Colorado in Denver, specializing in the oral tradition.
This tradition - passing along history through the stories of the participants -
is near and dear to the hearts of all of us creating video biographies, whether we
do it as a profession or as a hobby.
Walsh continued by recounting an African proverb that says there are two stages
of death. The first stage is sasha. Sasha are people who have passed away
physically - but the living still remember them and tell their stories. So the
sasha are not yet dead. The second stage is zamani. Zamani are people who have
also passed away physically. However, the living no longer remember them, nor do
they tell their stories. Zamani are truly dead.
What a powerful proverb - and it connects perfectly with the quote at the
beginning of this article. Speaking for myself, the work I do as a personal
historian, as a video biographer working through Family Legacy Video, does make
me feel blissful and is certainly heartfelt. It is indeed sacred and the work of
the soul. And it is dedicated to making sure my clients and my family remain
sasha, not zamani, after they depart this physical world. (See the testimonial
later in this newsletter.)
And yet there are many who feel they have nothing to say, that their life
stories don't merit telling and preserving. To this I offer another story
related to us by James Walsh. He told of going to college. He was a young man
from a Pennyslvania steel town, blue collar through and through, plopped down in
the middle of Duke University thanks to a wrestling scholarship. He had little
in common with his classmates and felt quite insecure in class. As a result he
sat in the back, saying little.
One day, his professor pulled him out of class. "Walsh," asked the professor.
"Why aren't you talking in class?" "Well professor," the young man answered, "I
guess I don't think my ideas are very good."
With that, the professor slammed down his fist. "Let me ask you this," he
exclaimed. "How many people in the history of the planet will ever see the world
from your perspective?"
Walsh turned the question around in his mind and then answered, "No one."
"So," said the professor. "If you won't tell us what the view is like, who
will?"
Exactly - who will describe the unique views and perspectives of your life, or
those of your parents, grandparents or other relatives if you or they do not?
The answer is obvious. By capturing and preserving our stories through video
biographies we celebrate our unique views of the world and of our places in it.
We share and relish our video bios while we're alive. And then, after we depart
this earthly coil, our stories, as told by us, remain to be enjoyed by future generations of our
families, keeping our memories alive, connecting our family past with its
present and future - and keeping us sasha.
If this isn't sacred, the work of the soul, I don't know what is.
If you've already started preserving your family storytellers on video, bravo!
If you haven't begun yet - start. Now.
And remember that Family Legacy Video is here to help.
--Steve Pender
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| A wonderful testimonial for a
recent video biography client. |
It's always nice to hear from a happy customer. We recently received this
letter from two clients who hired Family Legacy Video to create a video
biography for their father/father-in-law:
We hired Family Legacy Video as a birthday gift to my father when he turned
ninety. We wanted to preserve his fascinating life story for generations to come
and thought that a video would be the best route to accomplish this goal.
My father had written some of his memories of the 17 years he spent in the
Amazon jungle, trying to capture his life in a book, but he was not satisfied
that he was accurately communicating all he had experienced.
Steve Pender gave us a proposal with his vision for the video, along with a list
of questions for Dad to use as a reference. Additionally, Steve asked for
pictures and ideas for what he needed to supplement the narrative. After
allowing Dad time to get his thoughts and ideas together, we set up an
appointment for Steve and his crew to come to our home for the video shoot.
He came with his videographer, makeup artist, and light and sound people and
spent some time making Dad feel comfortable, explaining the format, and building
a rapport. The shooting went flawlessly – we stood in the background and went
about our day, allowing Steve to handle all the details. Dad was relaxed and
felt completely at ease under Steve’s direction, who was excellent at making
suggestions and giving tips to make the video the best possible. We were
impressed with the time Steve took to understand Dad’s life and knew exactly the
right questions to ask to evoke Dad's fondest and deepest emotions.
After three days, the shooting was done. From the information Steve gained
during the video shoot, he asked us a few questions to clarify people in
pictures and make sure all his facts were accurate. Throughout editing, he
checked in to make sure we were getting exactly what we wanted, which ended up
being just about everything Dad said! The final result took three videos plus an
“extras” video, with twenty copies of each!
We set up a date with my father to come over and watch it with us … and were
amazed at the result and quality! Steve had supplemented with numerous maps,
pictures, music and information, leading us to believe we were watching the
History channel or National Geographic! Dad, with tears, could not stop thanking
us for this gift. He had a sense of pride and perhaps mortality that was
radiant. We feel that his legacy has been captured for generations to come and
that we could not have given him a more meaningful gift. In every way, this has
turned out to be a wonderful experience for us, for Dad and for our entire
extended family.
Valerie and Matthew Crow
November, 2007
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The show's on at the Family Legacy Video™ Theatre! |
The Family Legacy Video™ Theatre is the online theatre where
you can view all the video clips streaming from the Family Legacy Video Web
site. The clips you see there will surely inspire you with ideas for your family
video, plus you'll get to see Steve Pender talk about his passion for family
history video in two television appearances.
Here's how you reach the theatre:
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First,
click
here.
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This opens the FLV Theatre welcome screen.
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Click on the "Click Here to Enter" link.
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You'll see a window containing a video screen with
controls and a list of clips.
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Decide which clip you'd like to view and click on the
correct speed (High, Low) to match your Internet connection. In the bottom
right of the theatre window is a list showing the appropriate speed for your
kind of connection. NOTE: Please be patient - you may need to wait a
few seconds before a clip plays.
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Enjoy the clip!
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Select another clip or close the theatre window.
The Family Legacy Video™
Theatre is always open, and YOU decide when the show begins.
PS - If you have any difficulties playing the clips, please
let us know.
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Ask Steve - This month:
Online video tutorials. |
Q: Dear Steve,
I'm looking into video production/business classes at local colleges here in SE
Wisconsin, and someone mentioned this morning that Premiere training is offered
online at www.lynda.com. Do you know enough
about this Web site training to recommend it?
What other computer software training would benefit me prior
to your April workshops? Remember, I'm a complete novice at video production,
but am becoming more and more interested in your line of work.
Thanks again.
- - Jeff J., Greendale, Wisconsin
A: Hi, Jeff.
I haven’t had any experience with Lynda.com, but have heard some good things
about it. I understand you can try it out on a monthly basis. The site does look
pretty comprehensive, but I haven’t used it. There is a company called Total
Training that offers training on DVD. I’ve used a couple of their training DVDs
and I think they do a good job. I see they also now offer their tutorials
online. Their Web site:
www.totaltraining.com. Please compare the two and let me know which you like
best.
As for other software, you should probably investigate a
graphics program like Photoshop and eventually
you will need a DVD creation program like Adobe
Encore.
Cheers, SteveGot a question about any aspect of family history
video production?
Send it to Steve at
steve@familylegacyvideo.com.
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