Tuesday, November 2, 2010

Church Produces HD Services For Broadcast, Web, Congregation

Nov 2, 2010 2:48 PM

Jubilee Christian Center in San Jose, CA, is contracting the Broadcast Pix Slate 5000 video prolongation network to create in-house video presentations during services and video productions for radio and Internet audiences.

Services are streamed live to Jubilee's website and after that announce on KTLN, which serves the San Francisco/Oakland/San Jose market, and a leased access duct on the local Comcast line system.

According to Jordan Forteza, Jubilee media director, the Broadcast Pix buy was segment of an on the whole emigration to a tapeless HD prolongation workflow. The HD upgrade, codesigned and commissioned by Ted Foldvary of Dex Systems Engineering, routine began in drop 2009, and the new network went live in March. Beyond the Slate 5000, Jubilee invested in 5 Panasonic AG-HPX500 HD cameras and ProPresenter program for verse and media presentations during services.

Prior to the upgrade, Jubilee had an outdated, tape-based workflow built around DV and Beta SP formats. Now, 3 video feeds are available right away from the Slate 5000 to an AJA Ki Pro, inclusive a backup recording of the live Internet webcast, a washed feed is to TV program amend and camera ISOs. Jubilee crew commissioned the new Slate 5000, which was purchased by VMI in Sunnyvale, CA.

Video prolongation for any service includes a three-person crew in the manage room. An user uses ProPresenter by a of the Slate 5000's M/Es to supply picture and strain lyrics on considerable screens is to 3500-seat congregation, whilst the executive runs the live Internet prolongation by the other M/E. The third person on the video crew handles shading, recording and lights. A fourth prolongation group associate handles audio, and others run the Panasonic cameras in the principal refuge - two principal cameras at the back of the church, a handheld in the front and two on Stanton Jimmy Jibs. Jubilee uses the HD-SDI outlay from the Slate 5000 (converted to DVI) to feed the screens in the sanctuary.

No comments:

Post a Comment