Understanding Television Production Cameras

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Published 2016-02-09

All Comments (21)
  • @TheNefastor
    A rare YouTuber who doesn't waste my time. Bravo !
  • i learned a lot in 14 minutes, my head hurts as my ignorance is going away :)
  • @owendoyle3085
    This is a photo of the first ever camera W-wait a minute
  • @ketchup5344
    Great!! Can we have a full two hour video tutorial on "everything you need to know about tv production" and at the same pace please? That would be like a year in college done and dusted!!✌
  • @vandervsf
    Great video, lots of info. Avoid blank white screen on your videos. try to always put a broll or something so we can focus on ;)
  • @kaurvali
    Still funny that most of tv channels are under 720p
  • @Vic-mh1ur
    That was nothing short of one of the best and most in depth technologically advanced narrations of video technology I've ever seen. you should be extremely proud of the hard work you have obviously put into the production of this video congratulations! Please continue to produce more great works like this one.
  • Wait hang on a minute..if that was the first camera, who took the damn picture 😰
  • @AapentVinduman
    Its funny, ive worked in ENG for 9 years, but after watch this video, i now know what it stands for.. lol
  • @matte-d349
    Genlock =/= timecode! And the sensors on the pictured EFP cameras are actually quite small (2/3”) when compared to most sensors on interchangeable lens cameras (still cameras, digital cinema, etc). This small size is what allows lenses with such large zoom ranges and fast, constant maximum apertures.
  • @maple_fields
    "The lenses are often more expensive than the camera" No kidding. I was working for a company providing video to ESPN, and we were using one of the box lenses that you were showing in the video (one of the Canon Digisupers, I can't remember which one), and they told us that the lenses had cost $250,000 when they bought them. The cameras we attached the lenses to were relatively inexpensive at around $40,000.
  • @metalhed2
    As a previous TV Broadcast engineer, This was a great trip down memory lane. You filled in many facts that I forgot about.
  • @G7LWT
    Wow, the pace of the canter through all the principles was so quick that I ended up watching the video at 0.75 speed. Thanks for taking the time to create and share this video, it’s very much appreciated.
  • @timboffm595
    Trying to procrastinate and watching random videos, ending up learning something which is exactly the stuff that's the exam about. College always gets you. Great video
  • @evepilot8001
    I have been working remote production as a freelance utility for 13 years, I even learned a lot watching this.
  • The most important thing is to learn how to use the camera we have. What matters is not the purchase of the most expensive equipment, but the perfect service of the one we have. It is not the camera that takes pictures, but the man.