Fun Green Screen (The 90 Degree Trick)
April 25th, 2010Green screen shoots have been around for ages. The key (inside joke) is that it is not easy to produce good, professional results. How many times do we all see local TV spots where the edges of the actor are “crawling”? That is because whatever company they hired didn’t know what they were doing. Here is a picture from my iPhone of a recent shoot. We were shooting full raster 1080p on a very good camera in AVC-Intra 100, we would have been fine shooting “normally” since the environment was properly lit and the camera package has the proper color space 4:2:2 for good green screen keys. But, to go the extra mile (and for fun) we turned the camera 90 degrees so that the head-to-toe shots of the actors would have even more resolution (but you had better be shooting progressive) It’s the little things.

Dan from Allied in Salem jokes around with DP Devon Lyon
A Fun Casting From 2009
April 25th, 2010At Lyon Films we work on a lot of corporate and TV commercial productions. It is fun when we work on more creative narrative productions.


A Look Back: The Oregonian spots
February 26th, 2010We just received set photos from The Oregonian newspaper commercial shoot from late last year. Here are a few photos from Michael Wilhelm, photographer with the paper. Thanks Michael!

Actor Todd Robinson Readies for a Take

Devon Lyon, Director, Makes a Point

Ryan Walters, DP, Frames the Next Shot

Devon Lyon, director, works with Trish Ferguson a great local actress
Web Video - The Next Generation: Image, Message & Action
February 23rd, 2010Improvements in computers, internet service and web software has led to a vast improvement in the delivery of web video. Now, using video on your website is becoming a great way to tell your story. Here are four projects we’ve worked on over the past year which illustrate the diverse and effective ways web video can be used.
Stafford Hills Racquet & Fitness Club
staffordhills.com
Stafford Hills Racquet & Fitness Club developer Jim Zupancic asked us to help him bring a tour of the future facility to life. By combining the architectural renderings of the facility with a live tour guide we created a virtual tour that goes beyond still images. Web designer Vic Parker at Six Foot Eight Media & Design incorporated it into a website that draws viewers in and drives them to action. The feedback has been tremendous with initial membership reservations strong and anecdotal stories of the video tour motivating people to sign-up.
Scott Bruun for Congress
joinscott.com
Challenging an incumbent US Congressman is never easy, so Scott Bruun wanted his website to stand out and be a personal connection with voters. The Bruun campaign asked us to help integrate video into their website. Inspired by the website of another candidate for Congress, Sean Duffy in Wisconsin, they turned to us to help shoot the video and work with their web developer to make it come alive. Paul Bryant at Design Point Inc. improved on the Duffy idea by further integrating the video into the website. Check out how the colors flow behind the video of Scott and pay particular attention to when he points at the sign up section and the donate button as his hand crosses over the graphics.
Wellspring Heart, a revolutionary heart wellness program, turned to us to help them tell their story and motivate people to join their program. Through interviews with doctors, patients and program leaders, we explained in a powerful way the program and the success it can bring to participants’ health. This is an excellent example of how video can take a complex subject and engage viewers to learn about it in a manner that print simply cannot.
Tour of Remodeled Homes
remodeltourportland.com
In its 11th year, the Tour of Remodeled Homes in Portland, Oregon is the premier remodeling tour in the state. It is produced by the Professional Remodelers Organization (PRO) of the Home Builders Association of Metropolitan Portland. For this year’s event, the producers wanted to personalize it by highlighting the participating remodelers versus just showing their work. After all, success of a remodeling project hinges in large part on how well you get along with your remodeler. We produced a series of interview-based web videos that the producers are using in a variety of ways. In addition, a 30-second spot is being embedded in a web ad on Comcast.net.
How can video help you with your image, present your message, and drive your viewers to action?
Helping with Haiti - Part Two: You Are Too Close to the Situation
February 18th, 2010By Kevin Curry
Author’s Note: This is Part Two in a series on crisis communication lessons I learned while assisting my friends during the recent Haiti earthquake. Read the background on the story in Part One below in this blog.
When a story personally effects you, reach out for help, even if you know what to do. You are too close to the situation and will benefit from someone with some distance.
Jill knows about communicating a message and knows how to work with the media. But she was also deeply and emotionally involved in the situation at hand. This was about her and Joe’s son and his safety. As such, that really should be her number one concern. My hope was that I could take as much as possible off her plate, and frankly as much as she was willing to give me. Her passion for the message was an invaluable resource, so I didn’t swoop in and just take over and tell her what to do. I acted in a support role while continually telling her to feel free to give me anything.
When I had ideas for additional media coverage or messaging, I presented them when appropriate. She was already overwhelmed with a variety of tasks, from fundraising to messaging to media coordination to just worrying about her son’s safety. I didn’t want to add more to that list by bombarding her with new ideas.
This approach required constraint and patience. Normally, I’m an idea guy coming up with creative approaches, new messages, and new ways to reach people. While I didn’t turn that part of my personality off, I did pick and choose carefully which ideas to present and, just as important, when to present them.
One key role I played was being a sounding board for Jill to bounce ideas off and give honest feedback. This required a level of trust on her part, for which I am honored to have been given, and a level of tact on my part when presenting feedback. Jill and Joe were in a very stressful situation, they were getting little sleep and inconsiderate feedback from me was the last thing they needed!
I remember very specific times where I needed to give feedback but was concerned about how it would come across. So I turned to my own communication adviser, my wife Katie, to make sure I was using the right words and right approach. As a communication expert in her own right and a mom as well, she was the perfect filter during these situations.
The role also required patience when waiting to hear back from Jill and Joe. With everything they were involved in it could be minutes or hours before I got an answer. If it was urgent enough, I would make multiple inquiries. But if I judged my inquiry to be less important, I would just wait. This required judgment calls on my part to determine when to push and when to let it lie.
It is important for those who are asked to be outside counsel to remember your proper place and be cognizant of what the person (or business) you are helping is going through emotionally and physically. (One thing I kept reminding Jill is to eat! We all get so busy we can forget the basics.) This means relying on your own analysis of situation and using proper discretion.
The bottom line in a crisis situation is don’t be afraid to ask for help from people you can trust. This advice applies to individuals, like Jill and Joe, as well as to businesses who might be facing a difficult situation. Outside counsel and support is valuable and will make the situation much easier to handle.
Next week - Managing Media v. Generating Media
Learn more about the Wilkins adoption effort by reading their great blog.
Here’s Joe’s blog about his trip to Haiti and work with God’s Littlest Angels Orphanage.
The Slice
February 17th, 2010Our next short film, is a little out of the ordinary (even for us).

Some behind the scenes photos.



Helping With Haiti: Lessons In Crisis Communications
February 12th, 2010By Kevin Curry
It all started with a simple email response to a friend: “If I can help out in some way, let me know.”
I’ve known my friends Joe and Jill Wilkins since our days at Linfield College. Today, my wife Katie and I have season tickets with the Wilkins for Linfield Wildcat football. So, offering to help with their current situation was a no-brainer.
Jill and Joe had been working for two years to adopt a son from Haiti. They were just 6-9 months away from being able to fly to Haiti and pick up their son, Samuel Chancelet. The earthquake on January 12th changed all of that. Suddenly, the safety of their son and the over 150 other children and staff at God’s Littlest Angels Orphanage south of Port au Prince became paramount. What also became paramount was finding a way to get those children, who already had adoptive families in the United States and were simply waiting to clear government red tape in the U.S. and Haiti, safely out of a country that had literally fallen apart.
Jill works in corporate communications for LSI Logic and Joe is a 3rd grade teacher, so both are smart and articulate. It was little surprise that local TV and newspapers picked up on their story as a way to localize the Haiti earthquake. Jill’s experience in communication also made her a natural to help other adoptive parents with children at God’s Littlest Angels connect with their local media and begin bringing attention to the needs of the children there. Just one day after the earthquake, nine media hits had already been made regarding the orphanage and the need to raise money to support it with food, water and supplies.
That was when I sent my email to Jill: “Great work on the media. If I can help out in some way, let me know.”
My phone range minutes later and I began my two week volunteer effort to do what little I could to help Jill and Joe get their son, help them and other volunteers get supplies to the orphanage, and help those same volunteers bring 81 adopted children safely to the United States. During that time, Joe would end up flying to Haiti with other volunteers to deliver supplies and eventually help bring the children home, Jill would end up in Miami to help coordinate efforts from the U.S., and they would make regular appearances on CNN with Larry King Live.
The lessons I learned about crisis communication were invaluable and so I want to share them with you over the next several weeks.
Next Week: You are too close to the situation, you need someone with some distance. Even if you know what to do.
Learn more about the Wilkins adoption effort by reading their great blog.
Here’s Joe’s blog about his trip to Haiti and work with God’s Littlest Angels Orphanage.











