Tag Archive for 'terms'

Starting Out in Location Scouting

Occasionally, I get emails asking how to get started in location scouting / location management. I am often suspicious that people that write these letters are looking for a way - ANY way - out of whatever it is they are currently doing (and potentially dislike) rather than actually being genuinely interested in the location services field - It’s a “real” job with lots of responsibility and very well not nearly as glamorous as you might have imagined.

Didja know the Location Department is the department in charge of making sure the trash gets carried away at the end of a shoot?

Also, let’s face it, I am a pretty easy target - a quick email requesting a free look into the crystal ball is a pretty cheap investment in a career and I am pretty easy to find.

… so how might anyone really know they want to be a location scout?

It’s almost like, if they did know, they wouldn’t be asking.

…but that’s just me, and as remote as it might be ;) there is a distinct possibility that my thinking on this could be flawed.

That said, this is how things happenned for me:

I attended the Art Institute of Fort Lauderdale (AIFL) in Fort Lauderdale, FL and earned an Associate of Science Degree (AA) in Photography.

Also at the time, I, of course, had aspirations to become a world-famous, world-travelled, filthy-rich, rockstar commercial photographer. When the major ad agencies of the world and top-shelf design firms of the world didn’t beat a path to my door upon graduation, I set about trying to learn more about my craft in the “real” world, seeking work as a photo assistant in the Fort Lauderdale and Miami media markets. At the time I entered the workforce and with considerations toward the size of the market I was in, I found staff positions in short supply, however, there was a blooming market for freelance photo assistants, helped by a blossoming South Beach “media scene” (and of course the generally balmy year-round weather in the region, which includes incredible stretches of pleasant, dry weather in the winter…) being fueled strongly by the fashion industry (as well as interest by advertising and media of many other types…), renovations and rehabilitation of the Art Deco buildings in the South Beach area of Miami Beach and a general boomtown economic environment of South Florida at the time. Miami Vice was in production then. In addition to working with local photographers I had a great opportunity to work with a number of photographers and production companies from all over the world, including a number of European-based teams and teams from New York, southern California and Chicago, to name a few.

One of the photographers I worked with as a photo assistant in south Florida was a fashion advertising photographer from the New York City area, Tom Contrino. I worked as a local second assistant with Tom for two seasons and when his first assistant moved up the ladder to a photographer position in the still life area of the business back in New York City, I was offered an opportunity to move north to the New York City area and become Tom’s full-time, staff first assistant, which I accepted.

In addition to freelance location scouting and production coordination for photography (both of which I discovered very early on that I found very gratifying and enjoyable) once I went to work to work for Tom I had an opportunity to expand my experience in these areas and learn an enormous amount about what it takes to operate a successful commercial photography business from the inside out and on a day - to - day basis - in addition to jobs we produced for clients, which often at times included location scouting and production coordination, in addition to my regular duties on shoots as a camera assistant and lighting tech, I was soon handling many back end chores such as hiring extra assistants, invoicing, equipment rental / purchasing, insurance inventorying, promotion - it all rolls together in a busy photography business.

My tenure with Contrino Photography also offered me an excellent opportunity to travel and even tho I settled in New Jersey, in the New York City metro area, I travelled quite a bit with Tom for work back to south Florida, to California, New Mexico, Nevada, Colorado, Chicago, and other destinations around the U.S.

Eventually, after six years with Tom, it was, of course, time to move on and I became, once again, temporarily, a freelance photo assistant / production assistant, with aspirations AND experience needed to develop my own freelance location scouting / production business, working with photographer / director / producer clientele; subsequently, providing location services / locations for film / television / photo / events and production services for photography is what my current occupation consists of. Thru networking and marketing / promotion I have extended my location services beyond still photography to include video, motion picture and event clients.

The “new frontier” for me (when I started out there was no email / we photographed locations using print film and made manila paper location folders filled with panoramic photos made by taping together 4×6 color prints…) is HDRi and image-based lighting for digital imaging (still and motion) and I have an association with Q-spheres to this end.

I keep a running blog and online resume of sorts of jobs as I complete them which can be found at rrhobbs.us

My website and home page, nyc.locationscout.us is both a blog and resource for location services and production. Please spend some time on the FAQS page! Use the search page and web and dig around for results for relevant location scouting search terms.

Look on the sidebar, I can be found on most of the popular social networks (i.e. Twitter, Facebook, etc.)

Anyway, that’s how it’s happenned for me - there is no magic formula for entering and developing a successful location scouting career - everybody is different and in the beginning it is often difficult to tell what you are truly interested in personally and / or how / if you might be of problem-solving service to enough people to make a career for yourself. SO much is tied up in personalities, personal priorities and changing needs, business relationships, aptitude and developed skills. - You really may only THINK you want to become a location scout / location manager… The only sure way to find out is to get out there and start DOING.

I always tell aspiring newbie location scouts to look for film school student film projects and productions to work on - attending film school is an excellent background for a location scout, some grounding in filmmaking is a very neccesary prerequisite. Look for start up and no / low budget short films and movies to volunteer for - you get out what you put in - hell, even if you are “just” sweeping the floors, you still get to watch - and learn - you have to expect you are initially likely letting yourself in for a period of going hungry and still, somehow, making ends meet - you have to be generally resourceful, develop keen communication / negotiating and research skills and you have be willing to toot your own horn (without being annoying) - but as you learn and start becoming a problem solver - if you love your work and are good at it, it will show! - making someone’s life easier, they will tell their friends and associates - The rest is yours to discover and grow by.

feed Yahoo! Search: location scout

  • Wikipedia - Location Scouting (I started and regularly contribute)
  • Go For Resources | Getting Started in the Film Industry
  • Location Works | How to Become a Location Manager
  • LocationTalk
  • Budget Travel Online | How Location Scout Kevin Hodder Got His Awesome Job
  • Cash B’s My Life As A Location Scout




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    links for 2008-04-25


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    Film Production + Location Scouting Glossaries

    Somewhat accidentally, I have stumbled upon several filmmaking glossaries of terms commonly used in the production world - someone starting out or perhaps a property owner likely to be working with a film crew on location at their home or business may find these links very useful:

    glossary elsewhere on this website

    update 4/18/2008 | added Greater Cleveland Film Office Glossary of Film Terms - will update regularly as new resources are discovered | original time stamp April 2, 2008 at 5:38 pm


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    locationscout.wordpress.com

    A companion site (as well as my Locamundo Portfolio) to nyc.locationscout.us is locationscout.wordpress.com.

    locationscout.wordpress.com is a photo blog of sorts, highlighting remarkable locations from my location library. As time goes by and time permits, I intend to add photo posts of more locations with high potential for use as locations for film, photo video and event production projects.

    I haven’t really seen the term “p-blog” as an abbreviation of photoblog used before, so I think I am gonna “coin it”.

    P-blog = photoblog. there…

    Ck out locationscout.wordpress.com p-blog

    feed Location Scouting For Film, TV and Photo
    • 40737 French Normandy Style Home New Jersey | Tuesday, 22 May 2007, 6:15 pm
      40737 French Normandy Style Home New Jersey Located within the NYC Film Zone Technorati Tags: home, house, residential, NJ, film locations, photo loca. […]
    • 40754 Luxury Apartment New York City | Tuesday, 22 May 2007, 6:02 pm
      40754 Luxury Apartment New York City Expensive Technorati Tags: apartments, lofts, luxury, design, modern, residential, urban, film locations, photo l. […]
    • 40755 Unusual Monolithic Dome Home | Tuesday, 22 May 2007, 1:22 pm
      40755 Unusual Monolithic Dome Home Contact for more details Technorati Tags: unusual, home, house, monolithic dome, residential, film locations, photo. […]

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    Location Scouting on Technorati + Other Sources

    Preface: This post is not so much about doing actual location scouting work using the internet*, but rather finding online content that other location scouts might be posting around the internet or other published content on the subject of location scouting. So I guess it is, in way, but not really?

    Technorati is an Internet search engine for searching blogs, competing with Google, Yahoo and IceRocket. As of December 2007, Technorati indexes over 112 million weblogs.[1] The name Technorati is a portmanteau, pointing to the technological version of literati or intellectuals.” (Wikipedia)

    Technorati has received some criticism recently surrounding some of its activities (see Technorati Wikipedia page), however, there is no arguing with an index of 112 million blogs, someone is using their services…

    To find blog posts, photos and online video about a given subject, do a search on the Technorati home page using terms pertaining to the subject you are seeking information about.

    Technorati relies relies heavily on the “tagstaxonomy hence when results returned from a basic Technorati search, the url will contain the following structure:

    …technorati.com/tag/subject

    Search results page for “location scouting” is http://technorati.com/tag/location+scouting

    If you are an internet content author and wish to have your content show up in Technorati results you may wish to note Technorati uses the “+ sign” separator for multi word search term phrases.

    Sam Rohn and I post a lot online on the subject of location scouting, so you are likely to find a lot of results from our websites in the Technorati index.

    In addition to Google’s ongoing indexing of general web content, Google Blog Search indexes blogs specifically and is a direct competitor for Technorati’s audience.

    Here is the results page for a Google Blog seach using the search phrase “location scouting”.

    Google Blog Search has gained some popularity recently, an example being that the very popular blogging software, WordPress recently switched to Google Blog Search as the default source for incoming links on the administration dashboards of WordPress hosted blogs and user-hosted blogs.

    I am not that familiar with Ice Rocket, altho I do know they have been around for some time and I am pretty sure Ice Rocket is one of the many default blog indexing services pinged by WordPress’s (Automattic) Pingomatic service. (If you havent noticed, I rely on WordPress quite a bit as the website platform for all my websites). The WordPress / Automattic group carries quite a bit of cred with me, so I am sort of like, “if they think it’s good, then it must be”.

    …so, here is a blog search for “location scouting” using Ice Rocket

    Yahoo has a blog search engine as well, but frankly, it seems a little weak - at least one review calls Yahoo’s Blog Search “not much more than a quick add-on to Yahoo News”. In any case, here are results of a Yahoo Blog Search for “location scouting”.

    A while back I made a post on rrhobbs.com about a Yahoo Pipe I found called del.icio.us Tag Masher that aggregates bookmark results using 4 different search terms which always returns some informative results. I’d like to find a mashup that delivers aggregated results from Technorati, Google Blog Search, Ice Rocket, Yahoo and del.icio.us.

    * You can find other content on nyc.locationscout.us regarding useful online tools for location scouting, try clicking the following tags on the nyc.locationscout.us archives page in the tag cloud (or just use the links below)

  • online resources
  • The search box (also located on the home page) provides nyc.locationscout.us site-wide search results of content contained on the site.

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    Wikipedia-n-Me

    I recently authored my second article for Wikipedia, a short definition / description of the term “location library”:

    Location Library (Motion Pictures and Still Photography)

    …the title is nearly as long as the article! ;-) Believe it or not, even tho the terms “location archive” or actually, more frequently, “location library” are terms I (and maybe you, too, if you are reading this - it’s not like I ever purported my blog to even attempt to appeal to anyone beyond a very specific niche of folks who work in various capacities in the film, photo and tv production communities… so unless you fit that profile the only way I can imagine you ended up here is you are really lost or really bored ;-) )

    …but I digress…

    I started a considerably lengthier article on the subject of location scouting several years ago:

    Location Scouting

    ..which I have continued to contribute to regularly as the article has matured - thanks of course to the generous contributions other Wikipedians

    Both articles are part of my efforts as a member of Film-Reel-Wikipedia Wikipedia:WikiProject Films/Filmmaking task force

    Also, altho the Wikipedia no-follow links policy is in place for very good reasons (i.e. link spam) and therefore, since Wikipedia doesnt generate any “link love“, I am tooting my horn here!

    …elsewhere on nyc.locationscout.us (…references to relevant Wikipedia articles…):

  • Wikipedia / Location Scouting
  • Wikipedia / Location Manager
  • Wikipedia / Location Library
  • Wikipedia / Filming Location
  • Wikipedia / Film Producer
  • Wikipedia / Film Production (Film Making)
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    Redrafting of NYC MOFTB Rules

    Lots of changes afoot at the New York City Mayor’s Office of Film, Theater and Broadcasting (MOFTB), begun this past year and likely to continue well into 2008 that involve a rewrite of many rules that include potential easing of some film permit requirements and other changes.

    Lots of news about this currently ongoing process can be found elsewhere on the web, including:

    MOFTB Website:

    1. August 3, 2007 - Mayor’s Office of Film, Theatre and Broadcasting (MOFTB) Commissioner Katherine Oliver today announced that MOFTB will redraft proposed Charter-mandated rules for issuing permits to film or photograph on public property. The revision of the rules will take into account feedback MOFTB has received over the past two months. Public comment, which is scheduled to end today, will be re-opened for another 30-day period after the redrafted rules are published.”
    2. October 29th, 2007 - Mayor’s Office of Film, Theatre and Broadcasting (MOFTB) Commissioner Katherine Oliver today announced the release of a newly drafted permit rule proposal, which is available online and published in the City Record. Under the proposed rules, which are designed to codify procedures that have existed in practice since the office was established in 1966, a permit would be required for a shoot if production equipment or vehicles create an obstruction, but not for productions that only use hand-held cameras or tripods that don’t cause an obstruction. The publication of the new rules, which are subject to public comment, follows the MOFTB’s decision to redraft rules following an initial publication and comment period that was extended to August 3, 2007. A copy of the proposed rule and an accompanying executive summary and Q&A document explaining it are available on the MOFTB website at www.nyc.gov/film.”

    Elsewhere:

  • Privacy Digest | August 4th, 2007 | NYC’s MOFTB redrafting proposed Charter-mandated rules for issuing permits to film or photograph on public property
  • New York Times | October 28th, 2007 | Mayor to Ease Permit Rules for Capturing City’s Image …via Picture New York
  • Gothamist | October 28th, 2007 | New York Photo-Friendly Again
  • Google search terms such as “MOFTB” or “MOFTB permit” for further news and discussion if this is a subject you are interested in.
  • -RH

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    Grazr Reading List

    Grazr | nyc.locationscout.us Files List | nyc.locationscout.us Blog

    My Feedburner Feeds in a Grazr Widget:

    Grazr

    Grazr | Frequently Asked Questions | Can you summarize Grazr.com in one sentence?

    “Grazr.com is a collection of online tools for assembling and sharing large numbers of feeds in the simplest manner possible.”

    read more

    Grazr Quick Reference | What is Grazr?

    “Grazr is a program that runs within any standard Web browser. It is used to display various types of feeds in RSS, RDF and Atom formats.”

    read more

    Grazr Website

  • Tour
  • Editor
  • Widget
  • Settings
  • feed Mr. Google Alerts (Adam Green)
    • AlertRank is now a free site | Monday, 29 June 2009, 8:52 am
      I’ve been quiet on this blog for a while, because we’ve been making a lot of changes to the company and sites. The first big change is turning Ale. […]
    • The secret to getting listed in Google Alerts | Thursday, 11 June 2009, 6:05 pm
      People are always asking how to get their site listed in Google Alerts. The answer is simple, just comment on those sites that you find with Google Al. […]
    • Tracking mentions of your name with Google Alerts is not enough | Thursday, 11 June 2009, 5:04 pm
      It is part of my job to read blog mentions of Google Alerts all day, and the same message keeps getting repeated: “Be sure to set up Google Alerts f. […]

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    Mapsack Widget

    Here is a way to imbed your Flickr photos on your website using the Mapsack Flickr Widget, which could be useful for a location scout wishing to present locations to a client at the same time illustrating said locations’ geographic postion(s).

    You will need a Flickr account (and some photos in that account that have been geotagged).

    Unless you have some experience working with Wordpress don’t bother. If you have no idea what the term “javascript” means, then don’t bother.

    Use the links and info given in this post to explore for yourself and complete your project to your own end. DO NOT contact me for support and please understand that I accept no responsibility for anything you do (or undo) to your website playing around with any of these toys. Otherwise- have fun!

    feed MapSack Blog

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    Location Scouting

    GO FOR RESOURCES: Location Scouting | by Scott T.S. Trimble

    “The Location Managers fill important creative and logistical roles on motion pictures, TV shows, and commercials. They work for the Director and Production Designer in that they are partly responsible for the look of the movie through their role in scouting the filming locations, but, at the same time, they also work for the Producers and Production Manager in that they need to organize everything that needs to be done to actually film at those locations.”

    read more

    Scott Trimble is an L.A. based location scout who is well-known to many of us in the film location services industry.

    Scott’s Go For Locations website has a number of helpful sections, including a resource page that will help answer a lot of questions someone considering entering the locations department sector of the film production industry might have.

    This article may also be helpful to a client or producer that has not previously worked with locations personnel to understand what they might be able to expect in terms of services provided by a location scout or location manager and the methods location scouts use to perform their duties.

    On my own website, nyc.locationscout.us, there are a number of FAQS that also attempt to answer some of the questions a client, producer, property owner, or someone considering a career as a location scout might ask.

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    Wikipedia - On Location

    On Location - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    “On location is a term used to describe the filming of a television show or movie on a real site as opposed to a sound stage. The term is often mistakenly believed to mean that the production is being filmed on the actual location in which its story is set, but this is not necessarily the case.”

    read more

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