Wednesday, October 31, 2007

Housemate D Effing Rocks

Housemate K says she likes to hear it when she comes home. When was the last time you heard a housemate say she likes to hear noise made by another? D does this in his room when he's taking a study break. The law texts are put aside and he doesn't want to fuss with music or charts. He just jumps in, no parachute, and lets fly with something like this.



I don't hear him doing technical exercises, like the scales and other patterns I used to practice on the piano. His idea drives him and his fingers have to keep up. It gives him that sort of "finding his way" kind of feeling like, I don't know, Jimmy Page's? I may have Rocktoberized the year (I can't believe it's Novendrix already!), but I don't know guitar music that well.


Having D around kind of makes up for the time a member of this band came to interview for a space in our house and we didn't have him move in. He had no references except for his father back home, said he was here to play in the band, and was living with his girlfriend who was also in the band. He could tell "by her fits and tantrums," he said, that she wanted him to have his own space. The whole thing sounded a little shaky to me. I had not heard of the band at the time. And also, the housemate whom he was supposed to replace ended up not moving out for another two months after he had said he would, and by then the prospective found another apartment.


Right about that time, a guy from Minnesota was emailing me to ask about working for two days on a documentary about a band that sounded familiar. I checked back on the prospective housemate's emails and saw that it was his band.


So the documentary maker and I go out to the local bus station to shoot this band doing it's weekly gig there. The prospective's girlfriend starts playing banjo and singing, and this other guy starts fiddling, and the prospective starts dancing around with his harmonica and his jug, and they are amazing and I'm wrestling with the boom and audio levels thinking, "Aw damn, I could have lived with this guy? I effed up."

You know what else is effed up? This site, Twango, where I stream sound from, lowers the pitch of everything. I play the mp3 off my desktop, and it sounds fine. I upload it and play it off the site, and it is definitely lower and I wonder why D's voice sounds more bassy. Anyone got any ideas? Where else should I be streaming stuff from?

Continue . . .

Wednesday, October 24, 2007

Guess the Party!

I won't say whose campaign spot I worked on today. I won't say what peppermint-crunching-on-the-body-mic candidate I worked with. But given the following two comments I heard from the campaign staff members about the rain which came today, in the midst of one of the longest droughts we have ever had, when 71 of our state's 100 counties are in the federal government's highest classification for drought, when there has been talk (that I can't confirm right now on the web) that only a month or two of water remains in the resevoirs and nobody knows what to do about it, when some folks are wondering what this means for future water use and what we can do long-term to provide for humanity in a world where weather is becoming more erratic, see if you can guess what the party affiliation was.

Comment 1: Golf course needs it.

Comment 2: My husband and I bought a boat and then moved here and were like, 'The lakes are drying up.'

I swear on the carpeted expandable shelf kit for my Rock 'n' Roller cart, something that gets me through when nothing else does, that these were the only two comments the rain prompted among campaign staffers today. I listened out for more and heard none.

Continue . . .

Wednesday, October 17, 2007

Dancing With a Star

It was at some point on the first day, the setup day, that I heard that MF and JP were going to be there. I called my dance partner and left a message.

“They’re having these auditions here and MF and JP are the judges, and all you gotta do is read some portion of some script -- all the info is online.” I carefully read the web address in the message.

My dance partner has been in local theater productions, has worked as an extra and a key extra, had a small part in the TV series DC.

I didn’t get a response to that message. I imagined my dance partner rushing to get ready for the audition, too busy to call me back. I wanted to not know when she would show up -- to just see her walk in the door and blow everyone away with what I know she’s got. Here was a chance to have her in something I was also working on, and with MF and JP as well!

The next day the judges started seeing contestants. Before each one entered, the producer would pass out papers to the judges showing the next contestant’s answers to his screeming questions. “Please note item number 7,” the producer might say, “which says that he sweats profusely.”

One contestant had stated, on his papers, that he has a rare form of diabetes involving kidney failure, and needs to drink water continually.

“You have to drink 3 gallons of water every day?” the judges asked him. He concurred. “You must be just constantly pissing,” they said. The contestant kind of nodded but said nothing, and I wondered if he were handling it some way he didn’t want to mention, like maybe with diapers. The judges harped on that for a while; it was then said that the guy was also an ironman triathlete; the guy read his part and wasn’t very good; they let him down easily and he left.

In his absence, the judges kept on about his disease, speculating on how he could compete in a triathalon if he had to pee all the time. I wondered, to myself, if maybe doing extreme exercise, and sweating, was the only time he could get a break from his constant peeing. The liquid was needed elsewhere, on the skin, so it could go there instead of to his bladder. You know, like how ADHD people finally get to focus and connect with the world, in a sense, when they are in an environment that reflects the spasms going on in their brains, like when playing a video game or performing search and rescue during a hurricane.

MF explained the name of the disease, pointing out that the prefix “nephr-” means “kidney.” Looking at her website, one can see that she knows about world health matters and diseases.

In the random conversations that occurred during the days, it was MF who had the assessments and background information to offer. While talking about relationships with JP, she said that she didn’t know what was up with younger folks these days. “I work on these shows with these young girls, and it’s amazing, they have nothing to talk about. Their minds are empty.”

JP said, “Plus, they’re crazy.”

MF said, “Well, men like crazy women.”

I was putting a mic in her orange sequined blazer at the time, and I said, “I tend to go for the crazy ones,” not even looking up from her blazer.

“Well, there you go, even [Elrond],” she said.

Another contestant had written on his papers that he loved architecture. After a series of contestants who had little to say for themselves, who got through the audition just by being cute (MF told one, “You can’t just vamp your way through this”), MF took the opportunity to ask him who his favorite architect was. When he named his first and second favorites (names I have not heard of), she nodded, smiling, as if seeing something new in a person -- knowledge of architecture that rivals hers, perhaps? She said, at another time, that she was an avid reader.

Another contestant mentioned something that he had “learned in social studies,” and MF said dryly, “At least they’re still teaching social studies.”

At the end of this first day of seeing contestants, I called my dance partner again and left another message. I said look, they’re doing this thing here and not enough contestants are showing up. They need people. I know you can bang this out. If you do it, you may see me in the room, but don’t worry about saying “Hi” to me. Just do your thing for the judges.

But I harbored a fantasy. What if they asked her about her ballroom dancing, and what if she said, “My dance parter is right over there?”

“[Elrond]?!?!” they would say. Surely, they would make us dance together. I would take off the headphones and leave the faders set in some lowish, safe position and go out there and hope I would look confident enough, happy enough, while struggling to overcome stiffness accumulated from standing all day, and to remember moves that we have not practiced for weeks because we’ve both been so busy trying to earn a living. No doubt, MF would have something to say about our presentation, would have notes for me in particular, because she has spent her life dealing with these matters of poise and stage presence. I would probably not feel that I had impressed her and the others, but I could at least say something like, “I did mambo for MF today, and this is what she said about my hip movement . . .”

I had decided I would suggest mambo because there was room for it on the small “dance floor” they had laid down for the contestants to stand on, and because I had heard a nice slow mambo in the music selections that the producer would play from his iPod during the down times.

That night I called my dance partner again, and this time she answered. She said it sounded like a neat thing to do, but she was really busy and had 5 hours of lessons to teach the next (and last) day of auditioning, and there was so much to do regarding home repairs and other matters.

Okay, I said, I understand. But, I told her, these folks are here, it’s right here in town, and I’ve seen them give a gold ticket to (that is, pass on to the next level of auditioning which will be in New Orleans a few months from now -- the second round of the ”tournament,” so to speak) people who have as much talent overall as you have in your little finger; I’ve seen you do so much better without even trying. But do what you want, and I won’t say any more about it.

She said she’d think about it.

On the morning of the second and last day, as we were about to start, the producer said that there were only six contestants waiting outside. I called my dance partner again, and she answered. I said, “Look, I had said I wouldn’t hassle you about this again, but I just wanted to say, there are only six people here now, so there might not even be much of a wait.”

She said that she had awakened with a migraine and couldn’t keep food down, but she’d do her best. And she said she had talked to her husband the previous night and he had said, “Where is the audition,” and she said, “in Durham,” and he had said, “well you silly, go and do it then!”

“Thank goodness for my coaches,” she said. “That’s what I’m talking about,” I said.

We went through the morning, seeing the contestants as they came. We had lunch at 2pm, and on the way through the hotel lobby to our lunch area, I scanned the upcoming contestants in the waiting area. My dance parter was not there.

After lunch, I did see her there, filling out her forms. I spoke to her. She was on low energy, mellow, quiet, unassuming.

The first batch after lunch were more of the cute ones who had hardly prepared, had nothing to say for themselves, and couldn’t act at all. By now, our judges had acquired a little bit of edge and would say, “It’s clear you have no experience, and if you really want to be an actor, then take some classes and see how that goes. And good luck. Stay in school.”

(My dance partner told me later that some of these contestants came out of the room crying. One of them said, “How can she shatter my dreams like that?” and my dance parter said to her, “Nobody can shatter your dreams. I’ve done this a hundred times and had my guts torn out. It’s the only way you learn to get better.”)

Eventually, the door opened, and it was my dance partner who stepped through, into the lights. She still had that low-energy demeanor. She took her place on the mark in the middle of the room, and MF said right away, “It says here you are a ballroom dance instructor.”

“Yes,” my dance partner said.

“Dance with JP,” MF and AZ said. “Can you dance with him?”

My dance partner nodded cheerily, and I was nodding as well in my shadowy corner behind the tent-like chimeras. She has been making beginning male dancers look and feel good for years.

“Nothing hard. Not tango,” said MF, again knowing something about a subject. Tango is indeed one of the harder ballroom dances.

JP was crossing the room -- no urging needed here for a star to do something when he’s on camera already.

“We’ll do a box,” my dance partner said. “So, come forward on your left foot.” She back led him, keeping her head up, her poise that MF would approve of. JP was looking down, watching his feet. The other judges hooted and clapped, and then JP took the lead, breaking out of the box and turning my dance partner in quasi-swing, stepping back too far on his rock-steps and letting his arm get too extended. My dance partner made it look good though, doing what she knows how to do, her eyes stabbing along their momentary sightlines as she spun, her long curls bouncing.

JP started to go back to his seat, then returned to the dance floor and said, “Can you jitterbug?”

“Sure!” my dance partner said. I have never exactly jitterbugged with her. Or shagged, really. She says that it’s all the same, just swing. JP started leading her in something that was pretty much swing, and there were more turns and spins, and then it was over.

“Wow, she really can dance,” he said, returning to his seat.

MF said, “It also says you run a non-profit acting troupe that goes to assisted living homes?”

My dance partner talked about that. MF said, “As someone who has had a mother in that situation, thank you for bringing joy into those lives.”

It was time for my dance parter to show what she had prepared. She spread papers around on the floor, and I thought “Uh-oh, she’s going to be one of those that moves around.” We had just the boom mic for the contestants, and the boom operator was up on a ladder to keep himself and shadows out of the sightlines of the four cameras. Being up there meant that he could not move laterally very much. Some contestants had walked out of his boom range and had to be heard off-mic.

She was doing a scene from this movie about a rock star, the scene where one of his girlfriends is on drugs and becomes furious with him. She started sitting on the floor with those papers around her, and our boom guy had to lower the boom much more than normal. This risked getting it in to the criss-crossing camera angles, but he could see the monitors from where he was sitting on the ladder, so he could see if he were dipping in anywhere.

My dance partner started with her manner confused and quiet, her pale Irish face wondering but not inquisitive, like a child’s. How does it affect parents when they see their grown children, as actors, revert to childhood like this? She stood up and came to my side of the room, off mic, and was now paranoid, strung out, her voice cracking near some nervous breaking point, warning some imagined person that the rock star would not care about her; then she flew across the room to the other side, again off mic, and screamed at the rock star in the way that it sounds like the throat is being torn. It was the only audio that distorted in the whole two days.

I had not been able to see her face, and now I really wish I could see the video of it, but this may have to wait until the show comes out, and even then, who knows if they’ll use it.

The judges were quiet for a few moments, and then AZ started saying things like, “You were really well prepared . . . I thought it was a little over-the-top, but has potential . . . as far as voting on whether you should move to the next level, hmmm, I’m not sure . . . it seemed a little crazy . . .”

The authoritative MF said, “JM would drive any woman crazy.”

AZ said, “Well let’s see how the others vote.”

MF said, “I say absolutely yes.” It was the most positive response anyone got from any judge the whole time.

JP waffled like AZ. It was like they were judging my dance parter by different standards. They had given the gold ticket to others who showed “potential” or “could be directed.” If they thought her performance was a little crazy, couldn’t they ask her to do it again, tone it down a little, see if she can take direction?

No, she got no second chance. I had practically begged her to come here and do this when she had other things to do, necessary things with a clear goal that she was certain to achieve. She had changed her priorities for the day, put her heart into this, and now two of the judges had gone all “New York Times Critic” on her, acting like exacting standards had been theirs all along.

She had been right in her first reaction to my messages, which was to blow this off and get her errands done.

I forget how the two guys actually voted. At least one begrudgingly voted yes, because I recall them saying half-heartedly, “Congratulations. You got a call back,” and AZ handing out the ticket to her.

My dance partner said “Thank you,” and stepped up to take her ticket. As she went back to the stage area and bent down to pick up her papers, JP said, “Nice job. Thanks for coming in.” And my dance partner said, with a little crack in her voice, “Thank you too, it’s a pleasure, I really admire your work.”

When she had left, the producer talked it over with the judges. They talked about how, with some direction, she could be someone who might have a chance. They shrugged. I was thinking, “You knuckleheads, you don’t know what to do with someone who is good; who may, with a little more focus, really surpass the acting skills of any of these judges; someone who has also demonstrated a practical side by employing herself and earning a living, who has a college degree, who took the time to learn ballroom dance so she wouldn’t have to support herself by being a secretary, who has put much effort into a long-term relationship which has turned into a very solid marriage, who has built a following of real friends and clients . . .”

Oh wait, those are real accomplishments. Hollywood just wants someone they can use, who gets the ratings, who gets a few laughs, and who cares if the laughs are the malicious kind.

On the phone later, my dance partner told me they had made her wait for four hours before her audition. I had not expected that to happen. One of her dance students had cancelled that day, so that was good, but the next one she had to cancel. Even with that, after the audition she had five more hours of teaching, then grocery shopping to do.

We were talking as she was driving home. It was almost 10 o’clock and I had just finished my day and packed up all the gear and put it in my car. For me, it had been a 13 hour day.

I said that I couldn’t believe the judges had acted uncertain. I told her she was easily in the top three who auditioned the whole time, and they gave out maybe eight or so total callbacks over the two days. The other two top contestants, in my view, were a student at the local university who acts in a soap opera there and, on her second try at her audition (after getting some direction!) had made herself really cry over a lost lover; and a woman from a town to the west who is in a semi-professional improv comedy group and gave a fairly original-seeming interpretation to a scene she did, though I don’t remember now why I thought that.

My dance parter said it was all political. The actors behind the desk were just trying to prove something because “they’re all washed up,” she said.

“But MF is on top of her stuff,” I said. “And she gave you an absolutely positive ‘yes.’”

“Yeah. Well. I’m not gonna think about it. If they call me, I’ll think about it then.”

“Would you go to New Orleans for the second round?”

She sighed. “I’ll just have to see.” She had practical matters to think about.

I guess it gets even more political in the later round, as in all reality shows. I can’t wish this nonsense on her. It’s like MF said in the previous post. If there’s anything else you can do that will make you happy, then do that.

“At least you got to dance with JP,” I said.

“Yeah, that was awesome.”

“It sounds like you really admire him.” I had not paid attention to him back in the SNL days, or at any time.

“Yeah, I liked his stuff. He was hilarious.”

So there was that at least.

She was arriving home. I could hear her dog barking in the background on her phone.

“Are you gonna celebrate?” I said.

“I’m gonna eat some nachos and go to bed,” she said.

Continue . . .

Thursday, October 11, 2007

"If there's anything else you can do that will make you happy, then do that."

This was advice given by actress MF today to an auditioner who had said he was in a pre-med program. She told him that she had been acting since she was a child, and when she was in her teens and thinking about going into it as a profession, she had sought the council of an actor friend. That was what he had told her, because “It’s too hard to do, if there's something else you can do.”

This auditioner’s reading of a part had been only slightly more lively than the average high school book report.

“You are in school to be a doctor?” said actor JP. He, MF, and AZ are the judges for this touring casting reality show in which members of the general public audition for parts in a movie (key extra parts, or small supporting roles). This is a pilot for now, may become a real show later.

The auditioner nodded yes.

“Well, I’m not going to say what you think I’m going to say next,” said JP. I had heard the producers on our show saying that JP, MF, AZ have been, in previous cities on the tour, too nice. None of them have the grumpy, harsh critic persona like judges on some other reality shows.

JP told the student he needed a lot more experience in acting, but if he had the drive and was willing to take classes, then he shouldn’t let anything stop him. Then JP went ahead and, perhaps remembering recent coaching by a producer who wanted him to be tougher, said “Really, you should stick to medicine.”

When auditioners were out of the room, the judges talked amongst themselves about their personal lives. “You know, I’ve never been to a strip club,” said JP. MF turned her pristine head to him and said, “Well J, I’m really proud of you,” deadpan.

“Let’s go tonight,” said AZ.

JP talked about a relationship where the woman was a young sexy wild person, and the older male actor decided he needed to quit dealing with her. "The thing is, she wants a sugar daddy,” said JP.

“They all think we’re rich,” said MF.

MF really knows her stuff. Someone was asking who is the president of a radio conglomerate, and she knew. She knew references and speeches from famous movies, old movies, the good stuff, not recent kitsch. I didn't catch all of the story, but her current name she adopted from a character in an old movie who had risen up against adversity and fought for social justice.

One auditioner had written on his form that he does Karate.

"Can you show us a kata?" said MF.

The guy went through some motions, then stopped and said his pants weren't loose enough for the kicks.

"I know," said MF. "I took Kung Fu for several years."

JP said to one male auditioner, "I like how you filled in the answers for bra and cup size, saying 'I don't have breasts.'"

(I think these measurements are requested on the audition form for costume fitting later, if the auditioner is accepted to the next level.)

"Well, I don't," said the auditioner. "Is that a prerequisite?"

"No." "No." said JP and AZ, looking across MF at each other. "That's not why we're here."

"It's why I'm here," said MF.

"Mmm," someone muttered, and it was quiet for a second or two before the conversation moved on.

I first saw MF last night, after the horrendous day of setting up the audio equipment as described in the previous post. I was leaving the hotel, and as I entered the space between outer and inner n doors, I first saw the short dark-haird sub-producer of this show who is bossed around by the producers as if she were a PA, coming in through the outside door. She was smiling and has one of those haircuts with longer hair tapering to a point about neck length in front of her ears, and shorter around the back like a boy’s. I had not met her personally yet, but I nodded to her as a familiar face around the set; then I saw the woman in front of her who had just let the outer door nearly close on this sub-producer, who made eye contact with me and then looked back at the sub-producer giving orders in her sort of gripy, nasally voice. This second woman’s turning head was perfect, a sculpture to be viewed from all sides: skin pure white, noise pointed, hair coiffed to immobility but in a way that sets the standard for how it should be done -- not like your local newscaster’s, but with a level of virtuosity that returns, at its height, to a level of ease and naturalness. It’s like MP playing piano, that coif is.

They had a makeup artist, but MF did her own in her room before coming down today, and again, she looked like a pristine doll. She was patient with me clipping the mic to her orange sequined blazer, but I sensed that she may not want me to clip the transmitter pack to her waist. Women in tight jeans tend not to like that. In fact, clipping the transmitter pack to a woman’s waist usually causes more consternation than my putting the microphone itself in, or near, her breasts. Most of the women I do this to are regular folks who have not been in a video before and are completely unprepared for the experience. They have spent the morning making themselves up a little more than usual, preparing for the camera; then here comes the audio guy dropping a mic cable down their shirt and tucking it into their pants waistline. And if they’ve got a roll of fat there, it takes me extra time to get the cable under that roll and into the waistline, and I have to push against the roll in back to get the transmitter close enough to their pants waist to clip it there. By the time I’m done, they’ve given up a certain amount of dignity, like maybe they’ve been to the doctor or something, and they’re all the more malleable for the director.

But I have learned, starting with PH a few years ago, that woman actors in reality TV like to clip the transmitter on themselves, so when it came time to do this, I said, “M, should I clip this to your waist, or do you--”

“I’ll do it,” she said, and took it from me.

I got her and AZ miced, and then the producers said they wanted the mics hidden, so I had to go back and re-plant them inside the shirts and blazers. All three of these actors were cool with that, not complaining. And their clothes were quiet, so it all sounded pretty good.

MF was totally cognizant of her transmitter. Whenever there was a break, her transmitter was the one that went off, turned off by her, to avoid any possible sticky situation. And she knows audio -- when an auditioner came in with his cell phone to use as a prop, she spoke up right away and told him to turn it off. “It makes a beeping noise on the mics,” she said, “even if you have the ringer off. It’s the radio waves.”

Amen, sister! I’ve never had anyone who goes on camera understand this before. Usually I’m saying, “Can you power down your cell phone,” and they’re saying, “it’s on vibrate,” and I’m saying, “we can hear that, can you power it down?” and they’re saying, “okay now the ringer is off,”and I’m saying, “no, we may still hear it, it’s not the sound by the radio waves it emits, the mic picks them up and makes a chirping noise,” and they still don’t get it.

MF is very down-to-earth, sensible, professional, nice. JP is also very nice -- he walked in, walked past boom operator S and myself and said, “Hi guys, how’re you doing?” sensing, I guess, by our appearance, that we were some of the “guys who get this thing done.” I did not recognize him, not being an SNL afficionado, but he had makeup on so I guessed it was him. And AZ is very nice too. All are easy to work with and good people.

Continue . . .

Tuesday, October 9, 2007

Tomorrow We'll See If This Works

We’ve got 4 cameras, 2 audio tracks each, for a total of 8 tracks. We’ve got 1 boom mic on the contestant and 3 wireless mics on the judges. Contestants will cycle through all day, one at a time, and the judges will trash or praise them.

The 3 wireless systems will enter the mixer in channels 1-3.

The boom mic will input in channel 4

The direct outs for channels 1-4, post fader, will be sent to 4 isolated tracks on cameras. (This uses 4 of the available 8 camera tracks.)

The 3 wireless mics will be panned Left and sent to Left Master. This will go out to another "wireless mix" track on a camera (1 more camera track used, total 5 now). I’ve been told that this mix track of the wirelesses is what the editors will probably use for the wireless audio, because it’s easier for them to use this one track than to deal with the 3 isolated tracks. But if one mic on this mix is screwing up the whole mix, then they’ll go to the isolated tracks.

If it were me editing, I’d want to use the isolated tracks only, because even if the 3 wirelesses are behaving properly, there will be phasing problems between them on the mix track. But the production may not have the money and time for its editors to deal with the isolated tracks unless they really need to, or they may not care about the quality that much, or they may not know that phasing could be an issue.

The boom will be panned Right and sent to Right Master. This output will be split via y-cable and be sent to both tracks on the Talent Camera. (2 more tracks used, total 7 now)

The Mono Out (mono mix of everything) from the mixer will go to the 8th track on a camera. Also, all mics will go to an Aux which will feed a y-cable which will send one feed to the camera operator's intercom system, and another feed to a small mixer which will step the audio down to mic level so that I can feed a second-rate wireless mic system which will substitute for first-rate wireless headsets for the director and producer.

Each camera will be fed by 2 or more 50’ XLR cables (for the two tracks/camera) joined to an ENG duplex cable which will attach to the camera itself.

It’s not enough just to send audio to the cameras. I have to be able to listen to the audio on the cameras. So, I need to bring all their headphone outs (a stereo output for each camera making a total of 8) back to the mixer and input them to 8 more channels.

To begin this link, the ENG duplex cable has a mini stereo return feed from the headphone out on the camera. At the other end of the ENG duplex cable, this mini stereo headphone return will go through the following adapters: stereo mini female to stereo 1/4” male; stereo 1/4” female to female turnaround; stereo 1/4” male to XLR male. It’s got more simultaneous male/female linkages than Behind the Green Door.

A third 50’ XLR cable for each camera will continue the headphone return back to the mixer where it will go into a XLR female to 1/4” stereo male adapter; then into a 1/4” female stereo to Left/Right split TS males, which each feed two more inputs on the mixer (8 total).

These 8 inputs of audio on the mixer will be what I use to monitor the audio on the cameras. They do not get recorded to anything.

The wireless tracks, isoated and mix, will go to Subgroup 1. The boom tracks will go to Subgroup 2.

On the Control Room/Phones selector, I will listen to Subgroups 1 and 2 and fade up the returns from whatever camera tracks I want to listen to at any moment. Now that’s power.

I will calibrate meters as follows. I’ll use my tone generator to send tone to all cameras. Left and Right Master will be set to Unity. 0 dB VU on the mixer will equal -20 dB on the cameras. Then I set all return input trims and faders, and all subgroups, to Unity. Then I set the meters so show the levels of the return inputs, and I set each camera headphone monitor level until its level on the Mackie meter reads at 0 dB VU.

Or, actually, I may have to turn the Trims way down for these camera monitor returns because they are really meant for headphones and may be pretty hot.

In any case, the point is that when the camera is getting -20 dB tone level, the meters for the returning monitor audio read 0 VU. This way, I can double check on the levels on the camera meters by checking the return levels on any return whose fader is set to Unity.

Got that? If it works, I’ll raise your children for you.

Continue . . .