Here are a couple of vids we produced for the video scoreboard, for today's game between Ottawa and Atlanta. Thanks to our editors/animators Jeremy & Dave for their work on these pieces.
Oct 31, 2009
A couple of Sens Halloween videos
File under:
halloween,
hockey,
video scoreboard
VIDEO: Chicago Blackhawks - Halloween masks
Here's a brilliant video scoreboard piece from the Chicago Blackhawks from Halloween 2008.
File under:
halloween,
hockey,
video scoreboard
Oct 21, 2009
All about the "Miracle Kid"
Puck Daddy has a great article about Josh Sacco, the 4-year-old who recreated the locker room speech from "Miracle", and created a bit of a YouTube sensation. Over 1.5 million people have watched the vid. We showed it on the video scoreboard at a recent Sens game too. Here it is:
Check out what the Nashville Predators did:
Check out what the Nashville Predators did:
File under:
funny,
hockey,
video,
video scoreboard
Montreal Canadiens players introduce themselves
Check out this video from opening night this year for the Montreal Canadiens. In particular, shuffle ahead to after the 4 minute mark, when the players introduce themselves.
It's a creative take on player intros, and I'm sure other teams will imitate it. It might not work for every team - but for the Canadiens, "je suis..." is perfect.
It's a creative take on player intros, and I'm sure other teams will imitate it. It might not work for every team - but for the Canadiens, "je suis..." is perfect.
File under:
ceremonies,
hockey
Oct 4, 2009
Edmonton Oilers opening night: bagpipes and acrobats
The Edmonton Oilers had a very unique pre-game show for their home opener this year, with a circus-like show featuring a huge bagpipe band and two acrobats performing tricks while suspended from the ceiling. The show's been taking a lot of flack on message boards -- but I think it was pretty original and from the loud applause it sounds like the fans at Rexall Place really enjoyed it. Here's the full show -- all 28 minutes -- from Oilers On Demand. (Make sure you watch the great intro video at about 13:50.)
(Thanks to CC for the tip.)
(Thanks to CC for the tip.)
File under:
bagpipes,
ceremonies,
hockey
Oct 2, 2009
Pittsburgh Penguins Stanley Cup Banner pre-game ceremony
The Penguins dropped four 60-foot scrims from the ceiling, creating four huge screens surrounding their video scoreboard. (An effect we saw a couple years back in LA during the NBA finals.) Check out the effect and video, narrated by Dennis Miller. Congrats to the crew in Pittsburgh for a great show.
File under:
ceremonies,
hockey,
video,
video scoreboard
Oct 1, 2009
Leafs crowd sings the anthem a capella
No anthem singer tonight in Toronto for the season opener vs. Montreal. The fans sang the anthem - cool.
(saw this on Kukla's Korner)
(saw this on Kukla's Korner)
UAF Nanook Hockey Open 07-08 "Highway to the Danger Zone"
This video is making the rounds today. Quite entertaining.
YouTube description says: "Hockey open w/ Polar Bear from Fairbanks, Alaska for the UAF Nanooks AKA "The Alaska Nanooks". This is the intended directors cut with the original music choice, rejected by the UAF people for being "too 80's" as if there is such a thing. Visual effects by Mike Martinez with help from Chris LeDoux of R!OT fame (on the moon explosion). Narrated by Brad F. Douglas. Written, Produced, and Directed by Mike Martinez."
YouTube description says: "Hockey open w/ Polar Bear from Fairbanks, Alaska for the UAF Nanooks AKA "The Alaska Nanooks". This is the intended directors cut with the original music choice, rejected by the UAF people for being "too 80's" as if there is such a thing. Visual effects by Mike Martinez with help from Chris LeDoux of R!OT fame (on the moon explosion). Narrated by Brad F. Douglas. Written, Produced, and Directed by Mike Martinez."
File under:
funny,
hockey,
video,
video scoreboard
Sep 22, 2009
When video scoreboard replays go bad
Here's some advance reading for my Sports Business students who are already checking out my blog. This topic always generates lots of discussion.
Background - in September the video scoreboard operators at Bronco Stadium in Boise showed a replay of Oregon running back LeGarette Blount punching Boise State's Byron Hout over and over and over.
From OregonLive.com:
Background - in September the video scoreboard operators at Bronco Stadium in Boise showed a replay of Oregon running back LeGarette Blount punching Boise State's Byron Hout over and over and over.
From OregonLive.com:
I just remembered. High in the stands after the game, we were unable to get out of the stadium quickly. So, we were entertained by the video scoreboard. Which showed the punch over and over and over and over and over and over and over and over and over. To do what incite a riot? They didn't show the cheap verbal comment. They just showed the punch. In slow motion I might add. So they edited it to make Blount look even worse. Over and over and over and over. And the Boise State fans grew angry. And they kept running it. And the Boise fans grew angrier. And what was a great environment in the stands, turned into screaming matches started by Boise fans. I saw them.From the stands, you really couldn't see the Blount incident. 99% of the fans never saw it because there was so much going on right after the game.
So, someone tell the video operator it's not okay to show it 24 times in a row. Which is how many times I saw it before I stopped counting. What an idiot. Apparently I'm not the only one who noticed that. Which means, when we find out what Hout actually said, 'Can we broadcast that to their fans over two dozen times so their shamed? They should be. Or maybe the BSU fan who took a whack at Blount? Is that fair game to continuously show on a loop to them? And Oregon fans the next time any team from BSU shows up?
File under:
replays,
video scoreboard
Doin' The Funky Feather
A fun story from the Midland Daily News about some interns who started a dance craze at Dow Diamond, home of the Great Lakes Loons:
Read the entire article...
And here's a YouTube clip. Looks like fun.
Although there's always a certain amount of energy surging through the Dow Diamond when the players take the field, it is when the Great Lakes Loons score a run, and the song "Sandstorm" by Darude begins, that it is at its greatest.
That's because it's Funky Feather time.
The recently named Funky Feather is a dance -- no, more of a cheer, well, maybe a cross between a dance and a cheer -- in which sometimes 5,000 fans pump their fists alternately in the air to the "Sandstorm" beat in support of the Loons. If you missed a few games this summer, it sneaked up on you, although at least one man's version has been ongoing for more than a year.
"I don't know how it got started in the games," said Loons intern Steve Addington, who is given much of the credit for the Funky Feather version of the cheer, and for getting fans involved in what has become a phenomenon, resulting in videos, T-shirt sales and graphics on the jumbotron.
General Manager Paul Barbeau knows how it grew, however. When a group of the marketing interns, which included Addington, would be waiting at the tunnel entrances to go out into the field for some of the games or shows, they would begin to do the cheer when the Loons scored. Then, just before the All-Star break, a few fans around the group began doing it, and then a few more.
"They took advantage of an opportunity," Barbeau said. "A new tradition was started at the ballpark."
An amazed Addington said it was kind of an inside joke among the interns.
"When the Loons would score a run, we'd do it, but I don't know how it got to be 5,000 people were doing it," he said. "It spread like wildfire. It really caught on, the arms going up and down."
It's like the people were waiting for permission to party. Prior to the marketing students leading the charge, visitors to the diamond could see people squirming in their seats when the Loons would score, the "Sandstorm" music would start, and Tim Lamparski of Midland, a really energetic fan, would get up from his chair and pump his arms up and down while swaying to the fast-paced beat. It was a dance he practiced at home, he said, and one that earned him a spot on the big screen quite often at the games.
"I always liked being on TV," he said.
He welcomes the Funky Feather fans.
"It's good," he said.
Addington said the two things that count are: the Funky Feather "raises the spirit of the crowd. You can feel the energy flowing through it." And, it took teamwork -- from fellow interns Jake Boven, Stephen Lovasz, Kevin Schunk and Jane Rose to videographer Chris Lones to the people who thought of the T-shirts, and other Loons staff, to make it work.
He said being a part of the Loons, what he called a "winning team," was "a really good feeling. There is no other feeling like it."
Particularly when you are doing the Funky Feather.
Read the entire article...
And here's a YouTube clip. Looks like fun.
File under:
dance,
fans,
interaction
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