Tuesday, January 11, 2011
"TV Anywhere" and continued iPhone craze
Video consumption on small screens is growing and growing. Producers and manufacturers want the "TV anywhere" to become a reality as soon as possible, where we watch a tv show at home, continue watching it walking, then in the bus, in the train etc.
Keep in mind as well:
Apple sold about 16 millions of iPhones and 7 millions of iPads in 2010.
Video consumption accounts for half of all Internet traffic currently.
Read more here.
Sunday, January 9, 2011
Riding bus in Colombia, part II.
Second, the ceiling is so low that a normally tall person like me (he he), 1.97 meters, needs to bend down. Better to sit down. But then, the space in front of the seats is so small, it's impossible to sit straight. The knees need to be in the isle. Hmm, patience. But, I was relieved as even my Colombian friend, very much shorter, complained as well.
Third, when you ride a bus in Colombia, you don't only pay for the ride. You also pay for the music. Because once you are in the bus, you'll notice that the driver plays the music he likes in all the speakers in the bus. The level? Just about as loud as in an average bar in Europe at Friday night. Kind of music? Well, here in Colombia in 90% percent of the cases, it's local music. Traditional vallenatos, salsa or merenge. But today the driver played house music. You know, the kind of music in rave parties. I couldn't avoid smiling. Bar level, completely filling the passenger area. Old people, kids, families, everybody riding to loud electronic music. Their faces as if nothing unnormal is going on. Nobody reacts. In Sweden, people would look at each other and wonder what lunetic is driving the bus. He is on drugs. Somebody would finally approach the driver, tell him and then later call the bus company and report the incident. The driver would receive a reprimand and if it happened again he would get fired or replaced.
Well, lucky me, I happen to like both the local music and electronic music. No reason to complain.
Riding bus in Colombia.
Well, maybe there are many accidents in Colombia, I don't know. Judging the way they drive, with a Northern Europe mind, it seems there should be. But my theory is that everybody here is prepared as they drive. Prepared that everybody else is driving like crazy as well. Everybody knows the rules.
Anyway, just an observation.
Medellín, Colombia
The time in Hawaii was great. I was there about a year. Let me tell you more about what we are doing there later. It is indeed interesting. A new big film about King David. A new exciting news station. And more.
I am now in Medellín, Colombia. I am here to work with projects and teaching in the area of video and film production.
Medellin is a beautiful and quite big city in the middle of Colombia. It is known as the city of Eternal Spring, due to its climate. I hope to tell you more about Medellin and Colombia very soon. This was just an introduction.
Entonces, vamos!
Saturday, May 22, 2010
Continuing forward
Dear readers,
As you know I haven't written here for a while. Mostly it is due to the confidentialilty of the work I have been doing, I can't really expose anything of it yet, but of course there are other things to tell. I just haven't dedicated the time, instead I have been communicating by e-mails.
I wish there was a way to be really open during a whole film project, so that everybody could follow the process, even from development, into pre-production, production, post production, marketing and distribution.
What I can tell you now is that we are working on a major feature film, but we are still really early in the process and before we have got more secure funding it's not really worth or appropiate telling anything. We also have a couple of other major projects we are preparing for, but they as well are in the early stages. Thus I ask you for patience about details. I do enjoy though to work so close to the director, I am just one person away from him in the "chain of command" and we all talk in the office. How easy would it be for me to work closely to an experienced film director in a production company in Hollywood? Not very.
One thing we are working with is "Concept Art", which means illustrations th

I also had a chance to see the latest cameras and seeing where it's all going in terms of media technology (picture: a 3D camera setup with RED cameras).

After the convention we even held a seminar here at YWAM, to share our impresssions. My part was to talk about the "Broader-Casting" trend, or the explosion and convergence of media content "pipes" that we see today; cell phones, iPads, IPTV etcetera. The overall trend seems to be that people all over the world are just consuming more and more media. Not bad news for somebody like me.
Anyway, there is more to life than work and I have (as always) been enjoying the climate here in Hawaii, especially during the earlier spring months which are normally quite cold in my home country. Now, I've heard the weather back in Sweden is already warm!
I have changed the place where I live and I now share an apartment with three guys who work in the film school here and I enjoy it a lot. It is great to have company, my rent is lower, it is very close to my work and also to the beach!
Since I wrote last I have also tried surfing for the first time in my life, I took a lesson, and actually stood on the board a couple of times! I must say though to "catch" the wave was really difficult, even with my background of some snowboarding, skiing and windsurfing. I hope to be able to try out more surfing further on.

I also did a hiking trip, we went hiking into a valley that is really hard to access by anything else than boat or walking up on a mountain and down into the valley.
It was very "cool" and the walking was steep and demanding. During the night we slept just under a covering tarp that we put up with cords. On the second day I had the opportunity to swim in a waterfall!
I have also spent some of my free time on my own feature film script, it requires a lot of discipline but I am getting slowly forward, and as most filmmakers turning my own scripts into film is what I dream most of to do in the future. But as somebody said, "Amateurs dream, pro's do", which means I have to take every necessary step. And of course it is not at all sure that my gifting or "take" on the whole thing is enough for producers and investors to be interested and all the rest.
I have now sent in my application for an extension of my US visa, for the rest of the year, and hopefully I'll get a reply within a couple of weeks. I go forward step by step and it's not all up to me, but it seems quite probable that I will get an extension and that I can stay for a bit more.
I leave you here, wishing you a nice spring and beginning of the summer (or sunny winter if you are "upside down"). I also want to say a special, great "Spring Thanks " to all of you who boldly support me both in prayers and financially. I can't really express how thankful I am to you.
Urban
Friday, March 12, 2010
Helping Haiti
Life takes unexpected turns sometimes. Right now I am helping out at a Help-Haiti-conference. We are located high up on a mountain here in Hawaii and the conference is organized by Youth With A Mission (YWAM).
About 40 international professsionals from different spheres of society are here - scientists, businessmen, lawyers, education specialists and many others (even a Hollywood film producer), all to brainstorm about possible ways of how YWAM and its friends can help Haiti. The conference has been preceded by a research team going this nation, and we also have with us the leader of YWAM in Haiti, who has been working there for decades. The focus is twofold: to find long-term strategies (like helping building the education system) but also to find practical ways of sending help within weeks. Haiti is a broken nation in so many ways and needs help in almost every dimension of society.
As I am writing this, the congress is discussing things as energy supplies, transportation, human resources and health, trying to find out how the YWAM base in Haiti can be used as a window to make a difference for the Haitians.
If you want to make a difference in Haiti, they right now need skilled people in many areas such as carpenters, electricans, administrators, physicians, teachers, kitchen managers and many other areas. If you are interested, let me know and I will help to get you in touch with the people in charge. They just said that the commitment for such work should be at least for three months, preferably longer.
That was a little "Haiti update", and within days we will be back on working with our film projects again. More about them soon!
Sunday, February 28, 2010
Through a feature film and a tsunami!

I am still in Hawaii, in the town of Kona, on Big Island, alive.
It has been an intense month of filmmaking, working on the feature, low-budget indie-film The Land of Eb, directed by Andrew Williamson. We were a team of about twenty people who spent a lot of time out in the country, filming in coffe farms, poor areas, on roads, in a supermarket and in a hospital.
The film was shot on a Canon 7D, a digital still camera with excellent high-definition film-looking video capabilities and the possibility to use different lenses.

I'll give you a quick go-through of which positions the team had: producer, director, director of photography, assistant camera, 1st assistant director, 2nd assistant director, production manager, line producer, production coordinator, craft services, gaffer, key grip, wardrobe and make-up, props department, sound mixer, boom operator and production assistant. Pew!
My position was sound mixer which means recording and mixing sound on location. Quite important! As my help I had the Brazilian boom operator Rodrigo, an excellent coworker who soon also became a good friend.
For a want-to-be director as myself, being a sound mixer has the benefit of placing me where the action is. Thus, to give me experience from a full-length film, it was awesome. I learned both technical and organizational things.

Then what was our film about? It is called The Land of Eb, referring to a historical myth which the main character tells his children.
The film takes place in present time and is the story of Jacob, a man from the Marshall Islands. The name of these islands might sound American, but this is a Polynesian nation with its own language and its own culture.
Sadly, the Americans took advantage of its vulnerability after the second world war and exploited the islands for nuclear bomb tests. Today, still many of the Marshallese people suffer from the consequences and are victims of diseases due to the nuclear waste (watch this video in YouTube for an update about this). Many of them fled to Hawaii.

The main character in the film, Jacob, gets to know that he is deadly sick in cancer and we follow him as he spends his last months leaving his family in the best position possible. Most of the dialogue is in Marhallese.
The film is almost a documentary and it was very touching to see that our actor actually lives his life almost exactly as portrayed in the film. Often the script was adapted or created on site to reflect reality. (In the picture: director Andrew Williamson with Tarke and Jonithen Jackson, who played the main couple in the film).
The atmosphere on set was very professional (although all of us worked non-paid) and our schedules were tight. Most of us have previously done YWAM’s School of Digital Filmmaking and this film provided an awesome opportunity to learn and progress for us all. I really look forward to see it cut together and I will certainly update you as soon as there is an official trailer.

Writing this, it’s almost March and the rest of this quarter I will work in the offices of the director I am supposed to work with.
We have several interesting films coming up, all in development and all with presumably quite high budgets. I will tell you more as soon as I’m allowed to! I can tell though, that they all will contribute with totally new, fresh stuff on the cinema screens if they make it all the way!
These weeks I have also enjoyed some days of recreation, including snorkling, cliff-jumping and hiking. I swam with manta rays (big flat fish) and I spent a night on a beach, hiking with a group, mostly from the film team. We also went to the top of the island, the inactive vulcano Mauna Kea at 13.000 feet (4.205 m). Sometimes there is even snow there, but not this time.

To conclude I again want to thank you all who are supporting me with your prayers and finances. Without you this wouldn’t be possible. I definitely believe I’m on the right track and I view this time as an amazing gift.
In spite of risks, may you take the bold and right steps needed in your life, and be encouraged by these words said to Joshua in the Old Testament:

I repeat, be strong and brave! Don’t be afraid and don’t panic, for I, the LORD your God, am with you in all you do.
(Joshua 1:9)