burrish-gull
Active member
- Mar 24, 2009
- 813
Spent the weekend with my old university mates, some of who work in tv and film. One of them it turned out was the cameraman hired for the Derren Brown lottery trick the other week.
He does specialist robot controlled camera work, usually for the film industry and revealed to me it was a split screen technique that they used. It was extremely complex and this camera had to be used to get the timings correct to match the live event exactly. A 'runner' then ran behind the split screen and changed the balls.
Interestingly they had problems matching this specialised film camera frame accurately with the television standard equipment in the studio (VCR's etc...) hence the slight frame jump people noticed.
He does specialist robot controlled camera work, usually for the film industry and revealed to me it was a split screen technique that they used. It was extremely complex and this camera had to be used to get the timings correct to match the live event exactly. A 'runner' then ran behind the split screen and changed the balls.
Interestingly they had problems matching this specialised film camera frame accurately with the television standard equipment in the studio (VCR's etc...) hence the slight frame jump people noticed.
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