If you’d like to make your own video,
here’s some advice that may help:
Notes on Settings
- If want to have the questioners
on camera, you’ll need two cameras
- Consider both one-on-one OR
small group interviews—but consider background, noise levels, and other
technical facets to assure that what you hear will be captured in usable
ways
Some
Possible Locations
- Coffee shops
- Libraries
- Bookstores
- Malls
- Schools (though permissions
might be more difficult there)
- Office cafeterias or other
workplace settings
If you don’t feel qualified with video techniques, think about enlisting students in your communications
program, or conducting audio interviews; digital audio recorders are quite
inexpensive and relatively easy to use. You still may need, however, the capability to do
some audio editing (again, communications students might be a great help in
this—perhaps ask colleagues to make this a class project!). And if you do audio
interviews, consider taking some still photographs as well, so that the audio
can be accompanied by some visuals.
Advice on Shooting Conditions and
Specifications
The overall
look of your project will be improved to the extent that interviews shot in
discrete locations are technically similar. Here’s some advice from our tech experts that will make your product
more effective and later editing easier:
- Plan your shooting location/s carefully so that you will have strong
light on the interview subject—be sure to shoot with the dominant light
source to the cameraperson’s back, taking care that the cameraperson’s
shadow does not fall on the interview subject.
-
If your camera tells you that the subject is
overexposed,
do not shoot in those conditions. If you intend to shoot at night (say on a street corner or outside
a building), plan to light the interview subject. Daylight or indoor shooting is
preferable.
-
Plan your shooting location so that you do not have
individuals standing or walking behind the interview subject; if possible, position the
subject 2-3 feet in front of a stationary background. If you are shooting in a mall or public
area, this is very important, as you do not want incidental persons to be
identifiable in your footage.
Too much variation in composition will make overall
coherence difficult to achieve. Consider the
following:
-
In general, you should shoot
the interview subject from the front, with his/her head and shoulders
filling the frame. Watch for glare
off eye-glasses. Position the
camera so that you do not need to zoom to get the subject in the frame in
this way.
-
Unless you are shooting the
scene with two cameras—one on the interview subject and one on the
interviewer—keep the interviewer out of the camera shot. Do not swing the camera back and
forth between the interviewer and the subject, and do not shoot over the
interviewer’s shoulder.
-
Never zoom in or out while the
subject is answering a question. You can
create zoom effects in post-production if they are necessary.
-
Do not shoot without a tripod unless you have an
experienced cameraperson using a shoulder-mounted camera. The image stabilizer on consumer
cameras softens movement, but it does not eliminate it. Interviews with jerky camera movement
will likely be unusable.
-
Try to use an external microphone
to capture the interview. The condenser
microphone built into the camera is sometimes not effective. Almost all cameras have a microphone
input; it’s best to use such a camera for this project. If possible, keep the microphone out of
the shot, but remember that the purpose of using the mic is to ensure
good sound quality. Also remember
that the subject’s voice is what is important. Don’t swing the mic back and forth between
the interviewer and the subject; instead, keep it positioned at a
consistent distance from the subject. If your camera has a mic input, it will also have a headphone
input; the person operating the camera or holding the microphone should
wear headphones. This might seem
like technical overkill, but even the buds that came with your I-Pod will
improve your control of the sound. Note that while many adjustments can be made to the picture in
post-production, in large part, what you hear when shooting is what
everyone is going to hear in the finished project. A weak voice, a hot or distorted voice,
buzzing, hissing, or excess competing ambient noise will make a given
shot unusable.
- f you use a clip mic, do a
test with the mic ahead of time. If you’re using a boom mic, be sure to
hold it outside of the shot.
-
Timecode: This
is important: Every time a video camera
is turned on, the “timecode” is reset; you never notice this unless you need to edit the video
using a software program. The
software will “capture” the tape only between timecode breaks. Timecode breaks are very time-consuming. You contribute to the overall efficiency
of the project by keeping the
number of times you turn the camera on and turn off to an absolute minimum. Plan to plug the camera in to ac power,
or take lots of battery power. Use
the PAUSE function on the camera between interviews. If you have a lot of “dead time,” press
the power button on and off periodically to keep the camera from timing
off. Your help with this will save
hours and hours of time in editing.
- In order to have more than just
“talking heads,” you may want to show something of the setting in which
the interviews were shot. Either before or after your
interviews, take some “establishing shots”: if you’re interviewing in a mall, take
some pictures of the exterior and the concourse, for example. (Take care not to get identifiable
individuals in these shots.) You may
also want images of the interviewer, which can be sliced in at any
point. Provide some footage of the
interviewer (from the perspective of an interviewee) in one of those
often-satirized shots that show the interviewer listening attentively.
Please remember to have interviewees sign a consent form |