Virginia Western Community College Education Foundation

Over the past two years, our team has had the pleasure to work with the Virginia Western Community College Education Foundation in Roanoke, VA. It’s core mission it to aid students from all walks of life, financial support so they can reach their education goals and set them up for either continuing their education at a 4 year institute or other place of higher education, or set them up for the career force with new credentials. They do this by a wide option of scholarships and grants, maybe of which are funded by private donors, trusts, or other sources in the endowment.


Our function, producing a video for the annual donors banquet is to showcase donors how their gifts and contributions have gone on to impact these young peoples lives for the better. Not by giving them a hard sell to contribute again, but share stories directly from these students themselves.

As a boutique production company, we have a heavy hand on lots of the creative concepts and development for the projects. It can take a lot of creative bandwidth but usually its worth it. Because we’re still a small boutique outfit, we still get to work hand in hand with our clients in highly collaborative ways. The level of collaboration we get to enjoy with visionaries like Carole, likely pulled from her previous career as a print news editor, makes the final product really shine. Many of her colleagues also bring so much to the table given they understand the intended viewer better than we do which we credit much of the success of each project we do with the education foundation. It’s why we’re grateful that our relationship is continuing for another year in 2024.

PROJECT TEAM

Director/Cinematographer: Angel David Verde
Project Manager: Carole Tarrant, Coordinator of Development, VWCC Education Foundation
Editor, Sound Design, Color: Angel David Verde
Grip: Carlton Melton
Production Assistant: Holly Snell


THE WORK - TABLE OF CONTENT


Letters To My Future Self - 2023 Donors Video

I think it’s a worthy goal to always out do yourself when working for clients that have the same over arching need from a video, but don’t want to do the exact same thing each year. This video was one we weren’t sure how we’d top so I guess the verdict is still out. However, with a slightly smaller budget this year we wanted to find a unique way to capture the hopes and dreams of these students without requiring a lot of filming days since those bring up costs quickly.

VIDEO CONCEPT
The basic idea we landed on was, how do we have students tell donors what they were able to accomplish with the help of their donations and thank you for their gifts and contributions to the scholarships that helped them through VWCC without having to say that so directly?

This is where the idea of writing a letter to their selves 10 years from now, as they hope to see their goals reached. The team at the Education Foundation partner with students advisors to really help them grasp the concept.


KEY ELEMENTS
To insert the thank you element, we asked each student to end their letter by saying, thank you for believing in me. This thank you was them literately saying thank you to themselves for working hard. But it was also a way to insert a indirect thank you to the donors.


STAGING

By in large this video was very simple. We didn’t change the camera framing once, we fit the student into the scene by way of a adjustable chair. We wanted their reading of their letters to be the focus of the video so the viewer had to tune in and not be distracted by excessive cuts and b-roll. We setup a little fake desk and then used a large rear-projection and compositing of a few prominent locations on campus as a background. Our team masked out the sky in the photos used and put in a loop of clouds to add some sublet motion into the scene without being too busy. It worked, plan and simple.

SOUND DESIGN
Music aids in cuing the viewers emotions. It’s overlooked so often. We settled on using a single song given the video itself was fairly short. Often we’ll try to use 2-3 tracks to carry a video but this one fit nicely in the background but it’s movements worked well when it needed to come forward to define each act of the video.


Follow Your Heart - 2022 Donors Video

The first donors video we produced for the Education Foundation really tapped into our core skills of branded documentary projects. We were able to interview a several students during a series of standup filming sessions on day 1 and 2. Then the foundation choose several students that we’d expand their story and really show a glimpse of their life and personality in verité vignettes. This was fun given our project manger and director, Angel David Verde has years of experience filming unscripted TV and documentary films.

KEY ELEMENTS
We made the video by asking students a series of questions. This formed the storyline and transitioned from their interview clips to each short scene. We asked about their scholarships, where they're from, who encouraged them to go to school, their future goals, and how they'll feel when they graduate.

One important factor was to include a feeling of enjoyment, optimism, and positivity. Since these are very personal stories and many of the students are going through challenging life changes, the tone can become quite serious. To lighten the mood, we decided to finish on a positive note by showcasing their hopes for the future, ending with some dancing to bring joy and laughter to the project.

It's important for people to see how their gifts and donations make a direct impact on others' lives. We're just the messengers; the students are the real stars of their own stories. These young people have a bright future ahead.

Check out Our "1/2 Ton ENG" Film Equipment and Grip Rental Package


DV Entertainment now offers compact 1/2 - 1 Ton lighting, electrical, and grip, electric, and lighting equipment rentals when hiring our owner/operator on as crew to make small production in Virginia easier. Our goal is to provide both service and equipment to meet production and budgetary considerations.

We offer film equipment rental in the form of our standard “1/2-ton,” or up to custom 1-ton film van packages that are preloaded with grip and lighting equipment that maximizes diversity on set while easily accommodating a compact custom lighting package for small, nimble, run-and-gun production film crews seeking high production value in a compact form.

Markets We Serve

  • Charlottesville, Virginia Film Equipment and Grip Rental Packages

  • Staunton, Virginia Film Equipment and Grip Rental Packages

  • Harrisonburg, Virginia Film Equipment and Grip Rental Packages

  • Roanoke, Virginia Film Equipment and Grip Rental Packages

  • Additionally, we can provide our services in Richmond, Northern Virginia, Hampton Roads, and beyond!


Film Productions We Support

✓ Short Films

✓ Documentaries

✓ Television Pilots

✓ Student Films

✓ Commercials

✓ Reality TV

✓ Music Videos

✓ Industrial

✓ And many many more.

DV ENTERTAINMENT PROVIDES FILM EQUIPMENT RENTAL VIRGINIA!

If you need to rent grip and lighting equipment for small to medium sized photo shoots, commercials, music videos, TV production, reality TV, or documentary, we can help provide the rental equipment you need. We can provide a small grip and lighting van, 2000w generators, grip equipment, expendable supplies, LED lighting and more with both in-house equipment and gear from our collaborative partners.


WE OFFER

We Provide our standard “1/2-Ton” package to to a 1 Ton van rental package loaded with Grip & Electric equipment that is nimble and small yet complete enough to cover a wide range of needs. With our collaborative partners, we additionally have an extensive inventory available to enhance your production, and we will go the distance to make sure you get what you need to make your shoot the best!

Grip Equipment:

✓ Flags | Frames | Nets

✓ Stands

✓ Misc. Grip Equipment

Lighting:

✓ LED

✓ Aputure Fixtures

✓ Misc. Specialty Lights

Electrical:

✓Electrical Accessories

✓ Extensions

✓ Compact Generators 

Camera Support:

✓ Tripods

✓ Carts

✓ Fogger,

✓ EZ Up Tent

Pre-loaded Packages:

✓ Standard

✓ Lighting and Grip Packages

✓ Custom Lighting and Grip Packages

✓ 1-ton Van packages



Waynesboro Tourism Virtual Tour - Bringing Landscapes To Life With Sound Design

The Waynesboro office of Tourism and Economic Development in Virginia was participating in a online press event put on by the VTC (Virginia Tourism Commission) to give travel writers and media a virtual experience in various locations throughout the state since most tourism offices are not offering formal press trips this year due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

When they reached out, they had a limited time-frame, spring hasn’t fully arrived so filming outdoors was going to be tricky given the trees were still bare in many areas, and the goal was to give viewers a sense of what it’s like to actually drive to visit these areas without actually being able to do so. In a nutshell, we were filming a series of very specific outdoor centered b-roll when it was still less than ideal to film outdoors.

To achieve this, our team almost exclusive looked to scheduling our shoot around the “golden hours” of the day, sunrise to early morning light, then evening to sunset. It’s amazing how much bleakness you can hide when some amazing light to fill the voids of bare trees and budding shrubs.

As we like to do on any project we have the opportunity to be hired to work on, we wanted to really take the virtual tour experience to the next leave and make each video as immersive as possible. Capturing compelling footage does take some expertise, but to make it really come alive so it stands on its own takes a bit more creativity.

To accomplish this goal, A: we chose a soundtrack that really carried a inviting vibe, then B: we captured actual audio and sounds from the places we were filming at, then panned and EQ’d the audio to really create an immersive, audio and visual experience. This video is best experienced with a nice pair of headphones or studio speakers. This was incredibly satisfying to see it all come together so nicely and know our client got more than expected.

PROJECT TEAM

Director/Cinematographer: .........… Angel David Verde
Project Manager:………Jennifer Callison, Tourism Director, Waynesboro VA
Editor, Sound Design, Color:………… Angel David Verde
Production Assistant: ……………..…….…. Mary McComas


Waynesboro Virtual Tour - Directors Cut

Visit Waynesboro used two videos that took viewers on two separate trips either to the Blue Ridge Tunnel or along the Blue Ridge Parkway. We decided to make a directors cut that merged these two videos together into one seamless visual experience. Enjoy!

The South River Science Team - South River Currents Video Series

After several years of working on projects exclusively outside of Virginia, far far away from our home office in Staunton, VA, we were contacted to help develop, film, and delver a amazing series of videos for The South River Science Team in Waynesboro Virginia and the communities along the South River.

The project is incredibly unique n nature as it’s both meant to provide entertainment and educate the viewer of the complexity of a incident that caused the accidental depositing of mercury into the South River and also share the stories and history of the people, communities, and region that is all connected to the South River through it’s watershed. The South River Science team’s main goal is outreach. The most exciting part to us is this project is now on going with at minimum a handful of videos being commissioned for their channels.

Our team really dug in deep spending about 2 months total on creative development, working side by side the project manager to find the right tone of the main series of videos. With this, we cast a amazing host to be the face of the series, added clever animations with a vintage feel, and are very simple yet fun practical puppetry based animation for the series “co-host” Southy the Mouthy South River Fish. Basically, a wonderful mid-century science illustration of a Rainbow trout. The tone of the videos were to be something appealing to both a younger audience and adults at the same time without pigeon holing the series into one age bracket or the other.

These very watchable, upbeat, info rich short form videos are complemented with shorter vignettes featuring a single interviewee speaking on a single topics of expertise that have a bit more of a sophisticated tone and delivery. They are expanding the areas of interest and topics covered that can still have a place for outreach, education, used in the classroom, at seminars, or other places that members of the South River Science team, their stakeholders, community members, and others can find use and benefit from having these in the public domain.

PROJECT TEAM

Director/Cinematographer: .........… Angel David Verde
Project Manager:………………………… David Hirschman, South River Science Team
Writer/Science Advisor:……………… David Hirschman
Drone Operator:………………………….. Max Quillen, Angel David Verde
Editor, Sound Design, Color:………. Angel David Verde
Animation/Motion Graphics: ……… Angel David Verde
Production Assistants/Grip: ……….. Courtney Campbell, Ian Berry, Zac Laliberte
Series Host: ........…….……..…………….. Leighton Brown Bryan (Episode 1 - 3)



South River Currents Video Series

Leighton Brown Brian, along side her “co-host,” Southy the Mouthy South River Fish, are the stars of this upbeat, clever, and fun, info-rich video series that used on location footage, expert interviews, along side simple animations and stick puppetry to enlighten, delight, and education the viewers about various topics that relate to the South River and the South River Watershed.


South River Current Vignettes

The vignettes (aka, short films/features) are more story driven featuring interviews of locals, stakeholders, and experts who live and work along the South River. These videos carry a bit more of a sophisticated tone and delivery however still meet the South River Science Team’ goal to use video as community outreach and engagement for education, the classroom, at seminars, or other places that community members find use from.

History From Above: The Wharf District & Sears Hill Staunton VA

History From Above: The Wharf District & Sears Hill Staunton VA

Enjoy a short video showcasing history from above in historic downtown Staunton Virginia. In this video, we're featuring the Historic Wharf District and the Sears House atop Sears Hill. Learn about some of the history of the Wharf, some notable figures who once lived here, and how this area of the city was shaped by the industry that surrounded the railway in the 19th and 20th century

Free Drone sUAS Pre-Flight Checklist Download For FAA Part 107 Commerical Drone Operators

You can read below if you want, but we know what you’re here for. The free stuff!

Download our free FAA compliant Drone/sUAS Pre-Flight Checklist. The downloadable files is a word doc so can easily be edited in Microsoft Word or Google Docs so you can customize it how you please.

Tag us if you use our Drone Pre-Flight Checklist!

We’re not in the social media/online influencer game, making money from ads or trying to have 1M likes on Instagram. We’re busy working. However, if you do end up using our checklist, tag us on social and let us know just so get an idea of who out there got some use from this.

Personally, we use this log when hired onto commercial projects by outside firms or other production companies to give them for their record. We keep a separate log book in our drone kit as well for our own recrods. It also adds redundancy and also makes it easier for them to have all info they may need if questioned by the FAA or if a network is preforming QC on drone footage while still having our own record. If you work on projects for large networks, be it for ABC, Discovery, or streamers like Netflix’s, they all do thorough vetting of any aerial drone footage so they know content hitting their platform is complaint with FAA laws for commercial drone work.

Being organized when hired on major productions is sure to leave a good impression as well. Given every checklist we found on the internet makes you sign up for their newsletter, is a paid web app, or is a online document that requires a subscription, we thought we’d make ours free with no strings attached. Our aim is to help and support other licensed Part 107 drone pilots in the US and promote responsible, legal, and compliant commercial drone videography and photography to make the skies safer for everyone to enjoy.

If you’re bored, you can read all the nonsense below which we selfishly put up for the SOE, so again, download the checklist and enjoy the rest of your day. ¯\_(ツ)_/¯ haha.


Unnecessary Fluff About Prep-Flight Checklists To Boost SEO :-)

If you want to get started with drone photography, make sure you add this pre-flight checklist to your gear kit.
The popularity of drones has exploded over the last few years as the cost and size of consumer drones keep shrinking. Although drones have many uses, both commercial and recreational, the popularity of drone photography has become one of the main factors in the growth of the Small Unmanned Aerial Systems (sUAS) market in the US and around the globe.

With this increased interest in drone photography has produced some negative consequences as there are no prerequisites for buying a drone and knowledge of the laws around flying them for recreational use only isn’t as commonplace as the rules and requirements for commercial, Part 107 are.

There are no mandatory tests to purchase one, only does getting the FAA Part 107 drone pilot certificate, for commercial use is required in the US and other major countries. Local laws are also limited as the FAA is the sole regulator of air traffic, so your town can’t outlaw flying drones, they can only outlaw launching them.

This is great for the large majority of pilots who are responsible and considerate. Unfortunately, there are always a few who ruin it for everyone else.

Our team has always had a licensed Part 107 pilot in command for all our areal video project needs, and we advocate for more education, and legal commercial use so future regulations that are made are still approachable, and not enormous hurdles for those looking to get into the business of commercial drone operating.

Given the majority of sUAS/Drone incidents are mainly due to their pilot’s failure to prepare correctly and know their equipment, there are a few things that absolutely every drone pilot must do when flying a drone for the first time.

  1. Know the laws that regulate sUAS/Drone use in your country.

  2. Read the manual.

  3. Put the drone in beginner mode and practice flying in a safe area before progressing your skills.

These are not recommendations to help you get better drone photos or video, but it’s essential to get in the habit of using a checklist (which is required by the FAA) in case you ever are requested to provided paperwork from a flight. The FAA has no specific requirements of what this pre-flight checklist looks like, just that you checked the weather, the drone is checked for maintenance, time, date, location, and I think if you had to get clearance. We have a lot more on our checklist for good measure, but again, what the FAA requires if current vague.

At The Studio

Before you leave the house or your studio to head to your filming location, you need to do some planning and preparation. This is less about composition and subject and more about safety. There are also some things you must do that simply can’t be done on location.

Weather

Flying a drone in wind and rain is not only bad for your electronics, but it’s plain dangerous. It may not feel windy on the ground, but 400 feet in the air it can be dramatically different. There are also regulations that can change how high you can legally fly. For example, if cloud can reduce your 400ft limit to 200ft. Or you know, the wind is too strong for your drone and you can’t get it back up wind and it’s lost forever. Check the weather forecast and don’t fly in the wind or rain. We use the app UAV Forecast for iOS along with just a standard weather app. We’ll also check METARs at nearby airports.

Time

If you’re planning on flying your drone around either end of the day, you need to know when the sun will rise and set. This isn’t just for photographic purposes. You cannot legally fly (yet) your drone at night. 30 mins before Sunrise or 30 mins after Sunset is what’s allowed in the US (check the FAA regulations for exact requirements).

Location

When planning your drone photos, you also need to consider whether flying in that location is safe and legal. Every country has different laws regulating how far you must be from airports, etc. They’re not there to ruin your fun, but to keep aircraft safe. Don’t be the like the guy flew a drone over a forest fire that stopped aircraft’s dumping water from putting the fire out from being able to operate. We use B4UFLY for checking Airspace and KITTYHAWK for getting clearance. There is likely something similar in your country.

Plan Your Flight-Path

Take a look at a map and figure out the path your drone needs to take to get from its home point to where it will photograph from and back. Often this won’t be a straight line, so make sure you’re able to keep the drone in sight the whole time from where you’re standing as line-of-sight is the law! Also check the distance to make sure the battery will have enough juice to get there and back with time to photograph or video, and still have some to spare. You don’t always need a exact flight path but thinking ahead is smart flying.

Update Your Drone

DJI Drones automatically check for updates at every startup. It’s a good idea to check for updates to your drone’s firmware and device app before you leave the house. Seriously, do this ALWAYS! Nothing worse than your drone loosing it’s mind over a river in a deep gorge in the middle of nowhere and almost having it nose dive into a rapid.

Format Memory Cards

This isn’t a safety issue, but you know, also just remember to put a memory card in to begin with.

Charge Batteries

Maybe just remember to do this the night before you plan to fly. :-D

On Location: Pre-Flight

Visual Inspection

Take your drone out of it’s bag and check it over. Make sure everything is tight and correctly attached. Check the propellers for damage or wear, check the gimbal and any lens filters that might be loose or might have smudges on them.

Calibrate Compass

After turning on the controller and drone, calibrate the compass if prompted. I make a habit of doing this before any new flights or in places that I don’t have cell service at. Magnetic fields can vary a lot from one location to the next, so don’t assume that because you calibrated it yesterday it’s okay today.

Check GPS And Set Return To Home Point

Make sure the drone has GPS location then check the satellite strength. Set the home point, including the Return To Home (RTH) settings. Don’t ever take off until the drone has a strong GPS signal.

Verify Communication

Check that the remote is communicating correctly with the drone. Check the signal strength and don’t take off until it’s good. If they’re not communicating effectively at three feet, it won’t be any better at 3,000 feet.

Flight Mode

Check which flight mode you’re using. Some flight modes are better for flying, while some are better for taking photos and filming. You may want to change flight mode while in the air, in which case make sure you know how to do it before you take off. If you’re flying commercial jobs, you should spend time practicing and learning every setting on your drone long before you’re flying for clients.

Re-Check Wind Speed

Don’t assume that the weather forecast that you checked last night was right. Look for signs of wind at higher altitude by looking at the movement of the clouds or trees. Use your phone to check current wind speeds at your location. Remember, just because you can’t feel any wind doesn’t mean there isn’t any. We carry a pocket sized Anemometer (wind gauge) so we can just hold it up and see the exactly ground wind speed at any location versus just making loose guesses.

Visual Inspection of Location

Look around and above and make sure there aren’t any obstacles that you may not have seen. Static objects such as power lines can easily be missed, but also check for objects in the area that may be moving like aircraft. Even with obstacle avoidance, don’t assume that your drone will detect and avoid them. It’s your job to know where they are.

On Location: Take-Off

Start Propellers

Many drones have a auto-launch function that will start the propellers and hover just above the ground. This is fine, knowing now to start the propellers yourself and check they’re working properly before it leaves the ground is a good thing to know. Listen to the propellers and if they’re more noisy that usual, stop them spinning and check them again.

Hover

If you’re satisfied that the propellers are functioning correctly, take off and let the drone hover for a few seconds. Check that it’s stable first, then use the controls to check that it’s responding correctly including the gimbal. If the drone is functioning as expected, it should be safe to fly.

Monitor Conditions

Never assume that because you went through this pre-flight checklist it will continue to be safe to fly. Conditions can change quickly. Monitor the weather and light and be ready to land your drone if necessary. Keep on the lookout for hazards that might move into the area while you’re flying. You also need to monitor your equipment and battery level. Bring it back sooner than you think is necessary and never ignore any warnings that your equipment might give you.

Have Fun

Drone’s are a lot of fun, but being unprepared can have disastrous consequences. As drone pilots we have a responsibility to fly safely and know when conditions require us to stay grounded. Read the rules and regulations, practice often, don’t take more risks just because you get better, keep improving your safety and situational awareness so you become a zero incident pilot. Happy flying!

Giving Back To Our Local Community: Waynesboro, VA

Our owner, David Verde, constantly aims to have our company give back in meaningful ways to the local community. We do this with video projects when appropriate, by advocating for the community and the nature we’re fortunate to have abundant access too, or by making donations locally that area residences benefit from.

This winter, even with the silver lining of the global COVID-19 Pandemic on the horizon, being safe and caring for others with social distancing and wearing masks when out in public spaces will continue to be the norm for months to come while vaccines get more wildly distributed in the US and here in Virginia and something we’ve been advocating both on and off set. With that, our team was happy to donate and place up a dozen “Play It Safe” signs to Waynesboro City Parks & Recreation.

THE IMPORTANCE OF GIVING BACK

Outdoor, nature, parks and other outdoor recreation and tourism destinations are a type of work we specialize in and our team by working in these spaces regularly, knows observing simple gestures by others can really improve a visitors experience. These signs are just a way to help encourage park visitors to continue to comply with COVID safety practices and think about others who you may briefly be in close proximity with while using the shared outdoor spaces. Our owner said the following. “ With our teams normal travel schedules for filming projects outside the area still mostly on hold, the South River and the area park systems have been central my new weekly habits and physical and mental health,” David stated. “This was just one small way we as a company could give back while also encouraging people to play it safe so more can feel comfortable visiting these pretty amazing park resources that not every community is fortunate to have.”

 
 

Although we’re based in Staunton, David and our team regularly venture over to our neighboring city, Waynesboro. We often utilize the close proximity to a small downtown main street, national forest, river access and diverse park amenities in Waynesboro to test out new video concepts or new equipment when preparing for upcoming film and video projects or just come over to have some fun in our down time!

ADVOCATING LOCALLY

You can learn about some of David’s advocacy and community engagement, promoting paddling along the South River water trail and standup paddle boarding through this stretch of river in Waynesboro. You can read more in a recent article on Blue Ridge Outdoor Magazine, or watch a interview below.

PROVING GROUNDS AND “OUTDOOR VIDEO TEST KITCHEN”

Our team also regularly tests out new video concepts and equipment in Waynesboro. We call these places our “Outdoor Video Test Kitchen.” Some of these videos we can release for public view which allows us to share our love for the area by bringing some welcomed attention to local attractions. You can watch the following video featuring several locations in Waynesboro that was apart of several creative concepts in the early stages of our outdoor adventure travel series, AWOL: Air Water Or Land.

Special thanks to Dwayne Jones, director of Waynesboro Parks & Rec for allow us to support their mission, the park system, and the city.

Have a great holiday season and remember, Play It Safe, even when you head outside to enjoy your local parks.

Carefree Boat Club 2020/2021 Digital Video Marketing - Video Production Under Social Distancing Guidelines

The Carefree Boat Club of Tennessee came to us to meet their corporate marketing and sales needs to assist with their sales goals, recruitment marketing, as well as informational and training based video content. Then the coronavirus/COVID-19 pandemic hit and we were in unknown territory of how to fulfill the full scope of this project while being in lock-down. Once things went back to some form of new-normal, filming under the original planned scope with travel, the extras casting needed while keeping everyone safe was no longer an option. Once the leading film industry professional organizations and unions released we were able to finally implement our internal guidelines we developed while using industry wide guidelines to bolster our already strict outline of how to get back to production and our team was able to deliver. Here are some samples of the remotely produced work and stock image editing our team was able to produce for the Carefree Boat Club of Tennessee for their video marketing commercial needs in such strange times.

Since the original lock down, we were able to make the remaining videos in this project happen following strict COVID-19 on-set guidelines and with a much smaller crew to minimize the number of people on location and on set.

It’s always a joy to film in the outdoors given that is one of our companies specialties, but even more so to find ways to navigate unexpected changes to still deliver and exceed the clients expectations.

PROJECT TEAM

Directed by: ...........……...….………… Angel David Verde
Client Project Manager:……… Hailey Kinner, Carefree Boat Club of TN
Editor, Sound Design:…………… Angel David Verde
On Camera Talent: ........…….……Sage Tanguary


WHAT OUR CLIENT HAD TO SAY

After we had decided to use DV Entertainment for our promo video, we faced a huge challenge with the COVID-19 pandemic lockdown. I am so thankful DV Entertainment created a plan to get us through until we could actually film in-person. They developed creative ways to satisfy our needs, even when we would throw things out there last minute. Grateful for the business relationship we have formed and I look forward to our next project together.

Hailey Kinner, Membership Director, Carefree Boat Club of Tennessee

Table Of Contents


Lifestyle & Testimonial Promo

The women behind the Carefree Boat Club of Tennessee in Johnson City, Bristol, and Chattanooga had a goal to make their new promo showcase the experience and lifestyle members of CBC have on their lakes and Rivers in East Tennessee. We hit the water with camera in tow just in time before the first cold weather snap came and the trees became bare to share the stories of 5 families who enjoy the lifestyle the Carefree Boat Club of Tennessee provides them. Our DP (director of photography) acted as director, camera operator, drone operator, and in-water camera to keep things light while really nailing the true essences of the projects goal. We added some well placed sound design to really give you the sense of a day out on the lake. We provided a main promo that you can watch below featuring their three locations in the Bristol/Johnson City, TN area. We also edited an alternative version that included footage from Chattanooga footage for their location in that area that you can watch here to see the slight variation we made for them.


30 Second Social Media Spot

Our first video we produced for the Carefree Boat Club of Tennessee was a 30 second promo for their social media platforms. However, because we could'’t film on location at the time due to the pandemic, we had to get creative. To get the boat club something they could use before their summer season began and people seeking outdoor activities to social distance locally, we made this spot entirely from a few sources of stock footage. Both from our companies catalog of footage of locations in the Carefree Boat Club’s area, but also some from our network of stock footage sources. It hit the mark and looked the part.


6 Key Benefits Info Series

The last batch of videos we produced for our friends at the CBC of Tennessee were actually produced once some of the initial guidelines were put in place to allow very small, socially distance activities to take place locally. This series of videos are used to give specific information to potential members who prefer video as their choice of information digestion. Our own production manager and assist editor who has both a background in stage and radio work stepped up to the challenge to be “the face” of the Carefree boat club of Tennessee. We used a nimble single camera setup, lighting and a teleprompter to produce these videos outdoors. A fun behind the scenes fact about these videos are, we didn’t even film them in Tennessee or on any of their actual club locations! Our crew scouted a small lake near our studio in Virginia that looks similar to the terrain of the Tri-Cities / Northeast Tennessee and you would'’t be the wiser, and! Our client loved them and agreed they looked just like the lakes near their marinas. We put a couple of these videos below, but you can watch the whole series at the clients website, here.

 

Power Players Short Film Series - Vol. 1 - Emilie

P♀WER PLAYERS is a short-film series produced and directed by our owner, (Angel) David Verde.

Power Players tells the stories of real women who challenge the ever-present gender norms and stereotypes by leading careers in various professional fields who spend their free time doing outdoor adventure sports. Each short film features a different woman, profession, sharing their struggles and accomplishments as women, mothers, sisters, daughters, partners, professionals, and outdoorswomen.

Watch the first volume in this series we filmed in 2017.

PROJECT TEAM

Directed by: ...........……...….…… Angel Verde
Technical Assistance: ……….. David Franusich, Christian O’Connor
Special Thanks Too: ……….…. Emilie Tydings
Produced by: ........…….……...... DV Entertainment

Northeast Tennessee's 2020 Video Campaign

For the second year, our team had the privilege to work with the amazing folks at the Northeast Tennessee Tourism Association, or, NETTA, which comprises of the Bristol, Johnson City, Kingsport area of the state. This year, one of their primary goals was to show diversity and southern welcome in video assets that spread across their 4 pillars of tourism attractions. Outdoors, Family Fun, Local Music, and History.

Their budget afforded our team to be on location for 4 days with a team of 3 crew members to film and produce all the footage needed.

Working and collaborating closely during pre-production with NETTA director, Alicia Phelps, our team took a lead role in the creative process, developing and proposing many of the concepts and storylines that made this campaign so strong with such captive story-driven messages. In a few of the topics featured we produced a long/full-length version of each video while also accompanying it with a shorter, 30 or 60-second version for more flexibility for future marketing use to NETTA.

This project was immensely satisfying to our team since NETTA’s trust in our vision really allowed us to stretch our creative wings.

PROJECT TEAM

Creative Director/Cinematographer:……. Angel David Verde
Client Project Manager:………………………… Alicia Phelps, NETTA
Editor, Sound Design, Original Music:…… Angel Verde
Additional Original Music/Licensing:……. Bryan Elisha Smith, Artlist.com
Voice Over Actors:…………………………………. Angel Verde, Sage Tanguay, David Franusich
Assistant Camera:………………………………….. Jacob Dellinger
Production Assistant:…………………………….. Tracie Hoprich


WHAT OUR CLIENT HAD TO SAY

I love working with DV Entertainment. I know the quality I'm going to get, and it's going to stay on schedule. The values of the company to focus on sustainable tourism, diversity, and "lesser known areas" are in line with our organization's mission. The fact that their work speaks for its self is everything. Our board typically only works with local companies, so the fact we've worked with them twice is a big deal!

Alicia Phelps, Executive Director of the Northeast Tennessee Tourism Association



Music In Northeast Tennessee

The music element of the 2020 NETTA campaign featured a 60-second promo that is carried by the song “Three cheers” by Virginia based singer/songwriter Bryan Elijah Smith and stars Bristol-based singer/songwriter Ella Patrick, aka, Momma Molasses. The long-form version switches tone to a profile piece of Momma Molasses and her journey to Bristol for its rich local music culture and heritage.


Girls Day in the Outdoors + Kingsport Long Island Iced Tea

The girls’ day in the outdoors, included a message of diversity as well as cleverly only featuring women on camera at any point during the promo. We filmed the whole piece in an unscripted-documentary style that really hit a chord with a genuinely authentic, emotional moment between our two cast members as they reflected on their day away from their normal, busy lives. The 30-second version of this piece gave a nice upbeat spotlight of their day as well, cueing to viewers they can see more in the longer version if they choose so at the NETTA website. Lastly, the city of Kingsport TN recently won the official title as the originators of the Long Island Iced Tea which we created a director’s cut showing the unique process of making their signature drink. The music for this piece was also an original composition by our in-house music team. The music for the Iced Tea Directors cut is by Virginia Based songwriters, The Whole Other.


Family Fun Day

The family fun promo features a nice recap style video to show a family with their young daughters having a fun day in Northeast Tennessee. We again, composed original music to carry this piece from start to finish and move through the different scenes in a fun, watchable way. Once again, the music for this piece was an original composition buy our in-house music team.

 
 

History & The Greenville Area

Our final pieces for NETTA’s 2020 video campaign is a brief introduction to the Lost State Of Franklin and a 30-second spot to promote visitation to the Greeneville area of Northeast Tennessee. NETTA hopes to continue to build up promotional media assets for this area that currently has limited video content to market to visitors, something we were thrilled to assist and help begin for them.