Tuesday, July 12, 2016

Fixing It in Planning

After helping a bunch of local indie filmmakers as AD on their films, I accumulated a lot of insight I hadn't exactly wanted about production problems. Finally I wrote it all down and I was delighted that Scott Macaulay, the editor of Filmmaker Magazine, was interested in publishing it on their web site.

The original article is here on the Filmmaker Magazine web site. If you would like a more readable PDF version of the advice, I've put the file up on my web site here.

Please share any additional questions, war stories or thoughts about the topic with me. And, of course, if you're doing a production in North Carolina, maybe I can help? Click here to get in touch.

1 comment:

  1. When a player purchases chips he will get his personal shade and the value of each chip is the buy-in divided by the number of chips received. The supplier will place a token on prime of the supplier's stack of that shade of chips to point the value. Many casinos now have an digital show at roulette wheels displaying the last 12 or 18 numbers. Some gamers like to 1xbet play any quantity that exhibits up twice or more in that span -- or to guess the last {several|a quantity of} numbers which have come up -- in hopes that the wheel is biased. Others like to match the bets of some other player at the table who has been profitable, hoping the other player has discovered a bias. Neither system is probably to|prone to} pay off, however they're nearly as good as good} as some other system.

    ReplyDelete