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Posts Tagged ‘projects’

Spidvid Projects You May Want To Collaborate On

April 12th, 2011

There have been a few interesting projects launched on Spidvid recently, and a few completed as well to showcase some impressive video entertainment from our community. Our community’s videos now have received over 400,000 views, and now the journey is on to reach a large milestone of 1,000,000 views!

If you have a video project that you have active in development, or one you want to launch, then get a Spidvid profile and post your project for our 1,200+ community members to check out and bid on.

There are 3 brand new Spidvid projects that you may want to take a look at right now:

Escape is a web series which is about to head into its 3rd full season! Cheers to its success to date! Creator Mike Feurstein is looking for a VFX artist to do some electrifying animation effects, Music Artists are needed for songs for the episodes, a Graphics Designer is requested, and a person who can Promote the show to find a larger audience is integral too. Check out the eScape Season 3 trailer below, and if you want to collaborate with Mike to make Season 3 a big hit then bid on his project or message him on Spidvid to start a conversation.

We are producing the web series “Gen Y” in collaboration with Illinois-based filmmaker Sasan of Gladius Arts. He needs to build out his core team with 2 Actors, and 2 Promoters to help spread the word about the web show. If you are based in Illinois and can act, or live on this planet and can promote this video to lots of potential viewers/bloggers then please bid on Sasan’s project.

Gen Y Web Series Logo

Philly-based James Jackson has a new film project called “Frogg Prince” and needs some talent from our community to move his project forward in a positive direction. James needs individuals from Philly to collaborate with, and he’s seeking out a Videographer with a DSLR camera who can add another camera angle to work with, he’s needs a Set Designer to create settings inside his studio, and he could use a talented Video Editor who can cut the story together with some added effects. If you are in Philly looking for a new project to collaborate on then visit the Frogg Prince page and post your bid for James to review.

Stay updated on all new Spidvid projects, by subscribing to them now. And again, if you have a video project in development, or want to launch a brand new one then get a Spidvid profile and post your project’s story for our community to take a look at.

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6 Ways To Win On Spidvid

March 30th, 2011

winning charlie sheenHow does a video creator or filmmaker get maximum value out of Spidvid’s community and platform? A great question that we’ve been getting a lot lately, and a question that certainly deserves a public answer to. So without further ado…

6 ways to win on Spidvid:

1. Create your Spidvid profile. Before anything can happen you need to get an account, and spend a few minutes on it to make sure it’s complete and interesting for our community to visit. If it doesn’t kick a** and inspire other filmmakers to connect with you, then you need to improve it ASAP! Here’s a good one to check out.

2. Post a project. Now that you have your remarkable profile created you can post a collaborative video project. The project should tell its unique story, communicate to our community who you’re looking for, where the project is in development, and the other important details that everyone needs to know about.

3. Bid on a project. If you aren’t a filmmaker, but are an actor, screenwriter, editor, or another type of talent then you can bid on Spidvid projects. Be sure to pay attention to where the core team is creating the video. For example, if you’re an actor that’s based in Miami but the shoot is in LA, then you will need to travel for the live shoot to be part of the project. But if you’re an editor based in London then you can perhaps be part of the post-production team.

4. Connect with our community. Our Spidvid community is full of award winning filmmakers, actors, writers, and directors so there is lots of remarkable individuals out there to connect with, learn from, and perhaps collaborate with on future projects. Get some conversations started today!

5. Connect with us. Follow us on Twitter, fan us up on Facebook, subscribe to our blog, or email us (community@spidvid.com) to get the most out of your Spidvid experience. We will point you in the right direction, try to hook you up with project funding or donate to your Kickstarter campaign, connect you with talent you need for your project’s success, or whatever else you may need, we exist to empower our community to thrive in new media filmmaking!

6. Complete a project, ship a video. By building your team on Spidvid, collaborating on the video project, and completing it so you can upload the video for distribution is the ultimate success and win on our site. Every time a project gets posted we always do our best to help teams form which are capable of reaching viral success upon successful execution.

Will update this post as other’s give us a #7, #8, and hopefully one day #100.

Also, we’re looking for someone to design an infographic for Spidvid which beautifully displays current accomplishments by our community to show our overall progress to date. If you can design art like this please get in touch.

Stay updated on all the new Spidvid projects from our community by getting our blog delivered to your email inbox, or read it in your favorite RSS reader.

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5 Tips for Getting the Most Out of Your Spidvid Profile

December 10th, 2010

Spidvid tips

So you have created a Spidvid profile but you don’t know what to do next. We’ve created a list of tips that will help you get the most out of your experience using our new media platform, and leveraging our community for video projects.

5 tips for getting the most out of your Spidvid profile:

1. Fill Out All of Your Profile Info – Tell your story and showcase your portfolio with your Spidvid profile. Embed your top videos and/or demo reel so others can watch what you’re up to, not just read about it. Include important links such as your website, blog, Twitter and Facebook profiles, IMDB page, etc.

2. Upload a High Quality Head Shot – A good first impression makes all the difference in getting your project bids accepted, and looking the part is half the job for some roles. So if you’re an actor, VFX artist, or graphic designer, expect other members to be highly critical of how you present yourself in our community. Also, if you can’t take the time to upload your picture, how will a producer trust you’ll play your part on the project?!

3. Actively Bid on Projects – The only way you’re going to get noticed and invited to participate in projects is if you start reaching out to video creators, and earn feedback from collaborating on projects. We’ve recently had several great opportunities arise for members to get involved in all aspects of some amazing video projects. From writing, to acting, to production, to promotion and beyond, no matter what part of the process you’re involved with there is a team and project waiting for you to be part of. So head over to our projects section and see if something interests you right now. If there is nothing right now that catches your eye then perhaps there will be in the near future, so subscribe to the Spidvid projects feed to stay updated going forward.

4. Participate in the Forums - The Spidvid Forums is the spot where you can start conversations about video projects, production, ideas to improve the Spidvid platform, or anything else on your mind. Create a thread about your project, post a link to it in your project description to let interested people ask questions, provide advice, give recommendations, and offer feedback to help you move forward and get your project off the ground. Additionally, the forums feature daily filmmaking and production tips, alongside a conversation section where you can connect to others in the Spidvid community.

5. STAY CONNECTED - Subscribe to our blog and monthly newsletter and connect with us on Facebook, Twitter, and YouTube. Connecting with us via e-mail and through phone conversations is the best way to build a direct relationship with us. Our YouTube channel features several videos that demo our Spidvid platform and visually show first hand the project work flow process.

We hope you find these tips helpful for making the most out of your Spidvid experience. If a question just came to mind leave it below with a comment, or email us. Don’t be shy, we would LOVE to hear from you!

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5 Remarkable Viral Videos From November

December 4th, 2010

I know it’s hard to believe (sarcasm), but there were a ton of amazing new viral videos released to watch in November. You have likely seen a few of these already, but hopefully a new video can entertain you below. We kick things off with a brave cat video, enjoy. And if you want to create some new viral video entertainment of your own but don’t have the talent to do it, then head over to Spidvid to collaborate and partner up with the talent you need on your team.

1. Cat vs Alligator

If you have a cute cat, chances are that you know he or she isn’t that brave. This is perhaps the bravest cat you will ever see, usually dogs are too intense for the average cat… but an alligator?!

2. Kobe and Kimmel Play Black Ops

We are used to seeing Kobe Bryant firing long 3-point shots in the NBA, but seeing him launch a rocket is much more fun and destructive.

3. Sesame Street: There’s An App For That

A few years ago Apple came out with their “there’s an app for that” ad campaign, and the messaging is still fresh in our minds to this day. If you like apps, Sesame Street, and music then this video is for you!

4. Angry Birds Peace Treaty

Speaking of apps, are you a big fan of the game Angry Birds like me? When I saw this video I was a bit upset because I wanted to be the first video creator to create a viral Angry Bird video. I have purchased a few Angry Birds plush toys and I will be getting them this month! Be on the lookout for my Angry Birds Spidvid project later this month, subscribe to the projects feed if you haven’t already to collaborate with me on it. It has the potential to be a viral hit and end up on our list for January. For now enjoy the peace treaty deal that the Angry Birds and Angry Pigs (sort of) make.

5. World’s Biggest Harry Potter Fan

My girlfriend has read all of the Harry Potter books and is a massive fan, but she can’t touch this guy. If anyone is a bigger Harry Potter fan please create your video and top this current champion.

Be sure to subscribe to our blog for December’s top viral videos, interesting video production posts along the way, and stay on top of new developments within Spidvid’s community as well. Get the Spidvid blog delivered to your inbox, or via RSS.

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The Benefits to Video Production Collaboration

June 26th, 2010
It can be a huge challenge to do video production on the go. Long gone are the days when ‘portable’ in the 1970’s meant Francis Ford Coppola and his portable video studio that fit into a van along with a large number of crew people. Fast forward to today- ‘portable’ might just be one person with a camera and a laptop in the trunk of their car along with the talent in the passenger seat as they drive to location- and that’s it. Yes, production has changed but collaboration is still necessary.
Even in the days where you can fit high-end video recording equipment along with a high-end laptop and RAID drives into your trunk collaboration is still necessary. Even if you can direct, and edit you will still need publicists, make up artists, FX, writers, and artists. You will always need more people then you can be. Even if you are only publishing to the high-end of youtube you can still get better, faster results with collaboration with other people.
1. The best product can only be achieved with collaboration. And only the best product can stand out in an increasingly competitive marketplace. Even if you have a strong creative vision it is only with collaboration that the highest technical standards can be achieved.
2. The most viral video product only happens through collaboration. Finding the actor with the perfect look, the voice actor with the wanted tone of voice, the cast and crew you need to do the stuff you can’t do you? Well there is a reason you collaborate- so that other people can do the things that you can’t do yourself. And even if you could do a lot of their functions they can quite often do the ‘little nitty gritty’ stuff a lot better then you could.
3. The most marketable product can only be achieved with collaboration. Even some of the most independent looking viral videos still quite often had an experienced FX team behind the scenes helping turning a normal HD video frame into one teeming with activity and life that was only put there through 3-D character riggers and animators.
4. The easiest creation process can only be achieved with collaboration. Props, chairs, walk-talkie’s, and folding tables need to be moved. They aren’t going to move themselves. By collaborating with PA’s you save yourself time- and back strain. That gives you more time to focus on the important things like deadlines and creative vision.
5. And finally, collaboration can work wonders. It can raise the level of quality of whatever production you are involved in. It makes the end-product- the final video that everyone will see much more professional and appealing.
While you could shoot a video with the web camera embedded in your laptop and expect a few viewers with are vaguely interested in it- having more people video your final video with much more higher interest can usually only be achieved through collaboration.

It can be a huge challenge to do video production on the fly. Long gone are the days when ‘portable’ in the 1970’s meant Francis Ford Coppola and his clunky video equipment that fit into a van along with a few crew members. Fast forward to today and ‘portable’ might just be one person with a video camera and a laptop in the trunk of the car, what a new aged on-demand video studio indeed. Video production is now more simple than ever before, but collaboration is still vital to overall success.

Chances are you can do one thing really well in the video production process, but that still leaves a few talent gaps open in order to create quality content. If you are good at shooting video then you still likely need at least one individual to be on screen, and maybe an editor to put everything together in post production. Collaboration is the key to forming a team capable of creating video entertainment.

1. The optimal end product can only be achieved with collaboration. Viewer attention is limited, so only remarkable content will stand out and reach a large viewing audience. Your idea or script is nothing without others helping you out to make the content a reality. Excellent scripts often sit on computer hard drives waiting eagerly to be used.

2. Viral videos only come to be through collaboration. Finding the actor with the perfect look, the voice actor with the ideal tone, and the crew who do the tedious work is necessary for reaching success. Sure you can learn how to do the things you can’t do now, but you should focus on what you’re passionate about and where your core skills lie. I can’t remember the last time I saw a viral video that was born through a single individual’s effort.

3. The most marketable product requires collaboration. Even some of the most independent looking viral videos still had an experienced VFX individual behind the scenes helping to turn a regular video into one with cool effects, and making the content so much more marketable. Be kind to VFX individuals because your next video may need the skilled expertise that only a VFX artist can provide.

4. Things are easier with collaboration. The more talent you have on your team the more you can draw from to make the production process easier. The challenge is delegating tasks so that each individual can contribute to the team’s overall end goal. Collaboration only works when everyone adds value collectively.

5. Collaboration can work wonders. It’s amazing what can be done when collaboration is leveraged for the greater good of the team. One individual can feed off the next to create momentum, and elevate one’s own skill level to new heights.

If you need to collaborate on a future video or film project in the near future, be sure to grab a free Spidvid account and connect with the talent you need to reach your production goals. Have an open mind, be friendly, and have fun collaborating this summer.

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