First look at the Sony FS7: Mountain Athlete

I collaborated with Mountain Athlete this Summer on a social media campaign directed towards their four specific training programs: Mountain Athlete, Law Enforcement, Military Athlete, and Fire Rescue.

Camera: Sony FS7 with the DJI Ronin

Lenses: Rokinon 24mm f/1.4 Rokinon 14mm f/1.4, Canon EF 24-105 f/4

Tune Room: Wood Brothers

 

The Wood Brothers are at in again. On October 2nd, “Paradise” will be their fifth studio album in just nine years… The two singles they’ve released, “Singin To Strangers” and “Never and Always” are up and ready. You should do your ears a solid and listen to these two tracks.

Couple cool things:
1. The Tedeschi Trucks team up
 If you follow the Wood Brothers, you saw this coming but, “Never and Always” gives you a glimpse into how Mr. Derek Trucks slide guitar melodies and Susan’s piercing harmonies charm the Brothers workflow.
2. Brother Chris plugs in
Chris Wood plugs in electric for the first time with the band, which, if you’ve heard him with Medeski Martin and Wood, you understand what this means. The guy’s a nut on that stand up and when he plugs in, its like magic… Hell.. listen to Little Walter Rides Again while you’re at it.


Co-Lab with Teton County Sheriff's Office

        

Did you know our sheriff looks like David Letterman?

      Up on Teton Pass via Helicopter, I was shooting with Teton County Search & Rescue. We were standing in an open field near Phillips Ridge with snow up to our knees, prepping gear for their training sessions. I was locked in at the moment. Armed with a Sony FS-700, and a metaboned Canon EF 24-105mm f/4L. It was a handheld/run&gun situation and my world was set in 24FPS. I was tight on Terri Rowanowski's hands as she talked into her radio.. she had ropes thrown over her shoulder so I thought the shot could go along with some cool radio SFX to give it a "confirming coordinates for a rescue" feel or something like that. While I made this moment my world for the time being and threw in a couple f/4 subtle racs to the Search & Rescue logo on her jacket, Director of Search & Rescue, Tim Ciocarlan taps me on the shoulder, holds out what looked like a cross between a spacesuit and a straight jacket, and says, "Here, put this screamer jacket on". 

Focke: "A what jacket"?

Tim: "A screamer jacket".

Focke: "Why is it called that"?

Tim: "Because most of the time, people are screaming while they're wearing it".

So I put it on.

Its the jacket/harness thing that they use during rescue operations to get people up into the helicopter. Next thing I know, Tim and I lock into this dangling claw that comes out of nowhere, which I'll appropriately describe by showing the following picture..

Screen Shot 2015-05-09 at 11.12.12 AM.png

With the FS-700 carabiner'd to my side, Tim and I were ripping across the Teton Range 2,000 feet off the ground & about 500 feet below the heli. I actually got a couple usable moments of Tim as we prepared to land on Phillips Ridge where he would begin the training sessions. This shoot along with multiple other scenarios with the Teton County Sheriff's Department can be seen below.



Confessions of an editor; "The first edit"

The store was called Cash Converters and I was in it. Past the portable DVD player aisle, and way past the "Guitars with one string" aisle. There I stood looking up at an array of cameras in a  glass display case. Even though It had some hot chocolate stains from years prior and no lens cap, it was the "nightvision" function that was advertised on the side of the Sony Hi8 camcorder that jolted my brain into buy mode. It was the size of a football and I was 17 years old and needed to make a video for a class project on William Faulkner's, As I Lay Dying. It was one of those, "you have the option of writing a paper or making a video" assignments. What 17 year old ever writes the paper?

As I Lay Dying.. the warming tale of the Bundren family, who take their deceased mother to the burial site of her choice. While I was editing one morning in class, exploring the world of splicing, swapping, and cross-fading for first time ever, another student walked into the room. He looked at me for a moment with a "I ate 1 too many Bojangles breakfast burritos" expression, then dropped to the floor and had a seizure. The CMD Z's would have to be put on hold. I yelled a couple newly acquired High School words, and without a google how-to tip off, I sprung into action. Looking down at his foaming mouth and pounding legs, I held the guy's head steady so it wouldn't smack the floor. He finally stopped seizuring, help came, and they got him out of there. A little time went by and I sat back down, looked back at my screen, and continued my first editing assignment...on..... As I lay Dying...

From that day forward, my soul was sold to the video production world. Wiggins, the guy who had the seizure, came back to class next week and the Faulkner video was turned in on time. The Sony Hi8, however, would only go on to spin its little tapes for another couple months..