Wealth Gap: Last Week Tonight with John Oliver (HBO)


John Oliver discusses America’s growing wealth gap and why it may be a problem in the future.

Connect with Last Week Tonight online…
Subscribe to the Last Week Tonight YouTube channel for more almost news as it almost happens: www.youtube.com/user/LastWeekTonight
Find Last Week Tonight on Facebook like your mom would:
http://Facebook.com/LastWeekTonight
Follow us on Twitter for news about jokes and jokes about news:

Visit our official site for all that other stuff at once:
http://www.hbo.com/lwt

Noam Chomsky "spending money is not speech" – Abel Collins interview


Famed linguist, philosopher Noam Chomsky sits down with Abel Collins to talk about money, free speech, McCutcheon vs FEC, and Citizens United in this poignant interview at MIT 10-8-13.
Blog on Huffington Post – http://www.huffingtonpost.com/abel-collins/chomsky-on-mccutcheon_b_5043436.html
This video is about 10-8-13 #2 Abel & Noam Interview Part 2 Money as Free Speech Produced by Robert Malin c.2014

43 Million Americans Live in Poverty, Worry About Future


Many Americans voted for Donald Trump because of concerns over the economy. But with Republican lawmakers proposing repealing the Affordable Care Act, privatizing Medicare, and cutting funding for food assistance, some of the 43 million people who live below the poverty line are anxious about what’s next, as VOA correspondent Aru Pande reports.
Originally published at – http://www.voanews.com/a/millions-of-american-live-in-poverty-worry-about-future/3705962.html

Lawrence Lessig talks about the corrupting influence of money on politics


Political activist and Harvard law professor Lawrence Lessig was in Austin this week and delivered a keynote speech at the University of Texas on the corrupting influence of money on politics. We caught up with him outside KUT Studios. Lessig is the director of Harvard’s Edmond J. Safra Center for Ethics, a Professor of Law at Harvard Law School, and the founder of Creative Commons.

Hans Zimmer – Inception – Live at Coachella 2017 Sunday, April 16th

RRRRRAAAAAMMMMM


Here is the long version of all the IDs stitch together. Believe it or not, there is a loose narrative that connects them all together. Client: Adult Swim

STAR WARS Battlefront II: trailer d'annonce officiel


Participez à des batailles légendaires à travers les trois époques dans STAR WARS™ Battlefront™ II.

Vivez l’histoire inédite d’Iden, Stormtrooper d’élite, dans une campagne solo originale. Battez-vous sur terre et dans l’espace dans une expérience multijoueur étendue avec des héros et des ennemis cultes, des batailles spatiales acharnées et un système de progression et de personnalisation approfondi.

Abonnez-vous pour suivre toutes les vidéos de gameplay de STAR WARS™ Battlefront™ II : http://bit.ly/2oDLwKI

STAR WARS™ Battlefront™ II sera disponible sur PlayStation 4, Xbox One et PC Date de sortie : 17 novembre 2017

Farpoint | E3 2016 Announce Trailer | PlayStation VR


Set off on a perilous journey into a hostile alien environment in Farpoint, exclusive to PS VR.

Having found yourself stranded on an uncharted extra-terrestrial world with only standard issue equipment to keep you alive, you’ll need to set off in search of a crashed space station – The Pilgrim ­– and its survivors to find a way back home.

Master an arsenal of primary and secondary weapons as you freely explore your surroundings, uncovering secrets of the strange Anomaly which marooned you.

Farpoint is built from the ground-up for PlayStation VR and using the PlayStation VR Aim you’ll be able to directly interact with the digital world.

The book I wish was around when I got into VFX

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‘Visual effects’ is so many things. It’s art and it’s science, and it covers an incredible range of disciplines, including illustration, photography, lighting, modeling, animation, rendering, compositing, coding…in fact, the list goes on and on.

I think it can be hard as a new filmmaker or film enthusiast to just get your head around VFX (frankly, as someone who came into visual effects journalism not as an artist originally, I am always playing catch-up on what others in the industry might consider basic concepts).

eranWhich is why I was excited to hear about the release of The Filmmaker’s Guide to Visual Effects, a Focal Press book by visual effects supervisor and instructor Eran Dinur. Dinur works at Brainstorm Digital on major projects like The Wolf of Wall Street, Boardwalk Empire and The Lost City of Z. He was also at ILM Singapore where he contributed to Iron Man, Star Trek and Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen.

Eran knows his stuff, and he also teaches it. His courses at fxphd were some of the most well-loved (trust me, I was there and saw the incredible feedback). Now he’s distilled a lot of this VFX knowledge into a book designed to be a clear guide for filmmakers about where and how visual effects can fit into their productions.

To give you a taste of what’s in the book, Eran has kindly let me publish an excerpt from a chapter about shooting on set, and specifically shooting with green screens. The rest of the book includes discussion about all the important disciplines in VFX, and as I read each chapter I was silently wishing the book had been written when I got started!

So, check out the excerpt below for The Filmmaker’s Guide to Visual Effects (that link takes you to the book’s Amazon page).

Smoke and Atmospherics

This is where things become a bit tricky. Ideally, green (or blue) screen shots should be kept completely clean. Indeed, it does not make sense to cover the green screen with smoke or fog, as this will make it very hard (or impossible) to extract. Also, all this smoke will be cut out and discarded anyway, so it might seem like a total waste to have it there in the first place. Generally speaking, green screen shots are better off without atmospheric effects like smoke, fog and steam.

There are, however, good reasons to make exceptions to this rule. I have worked, more than once, with DPs who rely heavily on smoke and mist to shape the light, texture, and “feel” of their shots. On such films, and especially if surrounding non-VFX shots all have smoke and fog, a clean shot will feel strangely out of place. While smoke and other atmospheric effects can be added as VFX, it is usually very hard to precisely replicate the look of practical atmospherics. I have found myself more than once in a debate situation with a DP—me, understandably, trying to push toward a clean shoot, while the DP, equally understandably, wanting to preserve the look and feel of the rest of the scene. My reasoning that all the smoke that happens on the green screen will need to be cut out and replaced with CG smoke (and will most likely not be an exact match), is challenged by the DP’s reasoning that the smoke on the subjects will still be retained, at least preserving the right look on the main action.

One parameter that can help the decision in such cases is the size and prominence of the green screen in the shot. If the screen covers only a small portion of the frame (for example, if it is placed in the very back for some minor set extension), then it definitely makes sense to leave the smoke or fog on, as most of the atmospheric effect will be retained and only a small portion will have to be replaced. However, if the frame is predominantly green screen, it is much better to shoot it clean, since large chunks of the smoke will go away with the green screen and will need to be recreated by the VFX team anyway.

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In this shot from Boardwalk Empire we had to replace the background. While the green screen was useful for extracting the subject, we were able to extract only some of the smoke, and had to augment it with generic elements. Boardwalk Empire © Home Box Office (HBO). Visual effects by Brainstorm Digital.

 

Reflections

An often overlooked aspect of green screens is their reflections in surrounding surfaces like windows, cars, water, mirrors, metallic or glass objects, or even the actor’s sunglasses. It’s important to remember that the green color can usually be easily removed through the usual spill suppression methods. However, if the reflection is sharp and you can see the distinct shape of the screen, some measures must be taken to avoid that, as this will require more elaborate (and often unnecessary) paint-out work. Change the actor’s angle to eliminate the sunglasses reflection, stick a poster on a background window, or dry out those water puddles on the ground.

In the film The Immigrant (which takes place in the 1920s) we had a shot of Joaquin Phoenix and Marion Cotillard walking down a NYC street, in the shadow of the imposing prison known as The Tombs (which no longer exists). During pre-production meetings, we suggested that the best location to shoot the scene would be a place that has a period-accurate cobblestone pavement. The logic behind this was that it would be easier for us to replace and rebuild everything around the actors, but not the ground beneath their feet (because of the interaction and shadows). Bond Street in NYC, which has an old cobblestone surface, was selected as the location, but now the question was how to cover the actors’ long walk down the street with a green screen. Instead of building a costly ultra-long green screen along the street, it was decided that a few grips would carry a smaller portable screen and simply move with it behind the actors. It all worked very well during the shoot, except for a certain “force majeure” that went practically unnoticed by all of us: a couple of hours before the shoot it had rained heavily, leaving the cobblestones wet and shiny. We weren’t really aware of any problem until we received the scans and started working on the shot. Only then we realized that the wet cobblestones acted as a mirror, clearly reflecting the moving green screen (and the guys carrying it). No spill suppression or any cosmetic fix would do the trick here. We had to replace the entire ground, and recreate every contact shadow and subtle interaction between the actors’ feet and the ground. It worked in the end, but, ironically, we had to replace the one surface in the shot that we planned to keep.

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The actors, the portable green screen, and the reflection in the cobblestones. The Immigrant © Worldview Entertainment, Keep Your Head, Kingsgate Films, The Weinstein Company. Visual effects by Brainstorm Digital.

 

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A happy ending nonetheless, with the offending reflections removed and the actors walking down the matte-painted 1920s’ NY street. The Immigrant © Worldview Entertainment, Keep Your Head, Kingsgate Films, The Weinstein Company. Visual effects by Brainstorm Digital.

One Animation’s ‘Oddbods’ Season One now available on Netflix

Starting Monday, Netflix will be streaming the long-form version of the globally successful CG animated TV comedy series, Oddbods, with a worldwide roll-out that will delight fans both old and new.

Produced by Singapore-based CG animation studio One Animation, Oddbods follows the antics of seven hilarious characters – Zee, Fuse, Bubbles, Slick, Pogo, Jeff and Newt – as they cope with everyday antics, playing pranks on one another and driving each other crazy. Each character has their own specific personality traits- such as Fuse’s legendary bad temper and Jeff’s meticulous attention to detail.

The series has an international fan base with audience spanning age groups. A collection of Oddbods shorts has already pulled in nearly two billion views on social media, acquiring a massive online fan base along the way, while also broadcasting in more than 100 countries.

Season One of Oddbods is currently available on Netflix in North America, Latin America, Europe, Middle East, Africa, Australia and New Zealand. Season Two will start streaming in all territories around the world later this summer.

The post One Animation’s ‘Oddbods’ Season One now available on Netflix appeared first on AnimationXpress.