RAAM Recall: Being A Team

Five years ago I was part of a winning 11 person team supporting a rookie cyclist in Race Across America (#RAAM), a 12 day bicycle race across the United States.  This race is often called the toughest bicycle race in the world because it’s non-stop, 30% longer than the Tour de France and completed in nearly half the time.  I can attest to the rigor of this event on the athlete and the team as a whole.

Tuesday, June 13, 2017 cyclists, including the cyclist I supported, will head out again from Oceanside, CA on the RAAM course heading to Annapolis, MD.  The overall winner will cross in around 8 days, which is still astounding to me.  So, what’s it like to RAAM, you ask?

In my RAAM experience I was along for the ride, a one person media team, to document the experience through video and photographs, and build an audience by way of social media posts for the charity (Hopecam) for which we raced night and day.  I really didn’t know anyone on the team well.  We raised over $300,000.  We had three support vehicles–two minivans and an RV.  We also had a medic, nutritionist, a bike mechanic, and a massage therapist–most of us volunteered our time.  We slept and ate when we could, and shared beds as practical strangers.  There was little conflict, a lot of sweat and smelly feet, one instance of leaving behind a team member at a convenience store, no booze, a few good laughs, and everyone on their best behavior.  Near the completion of the race, fractures in the team caused by personality and generational conflicts and exhaustion were beginning to show, but the finish line was so close and our race going so well, no one dared to diminish his chances.  We all could see the finish line., and an end to our forced companionship.

At the end, our cyclist, finished tenth overall and first place in his age group, a resounding success as most rookies do not even finish this race.  It can’t be understated how important the role of the support team is in this event.  No competitor can complete this race alone, no matter how well he or she trains.  If the team falls apart, so does the racer.

I’ve been on many teams in my lifetime as a youth and adult athlete and media professional, a parent and a family member.  These worlds are all strikingly similar in this way.  I know how to be a good team member.  I might even say I have been on so many teams and become so accustomed to sacrificing myself to such a great extent that I have a hard time being without a team and focusing just on my interests.

As the race unfolded, I saw each team member go through his or her ups and downs–myself included.   Exhaustion affects people in different ways–bad decisions, irritability, mistakes, etc.  Many a time I internally lamented not being allowed access to the racer or the follow vehicle to have constant opportunities to videotape the cyclist especially at sunrise and sunset.  I thought this was a pretty critical mistake for this team’s effort–especially from a PR perspective.  Shots were missed as a result.  Moments were missed that would certainly have been useful.  At times I was asleep when I should have been awake which was unavoidable given the scale of this race.   I could have fought for the access, but I didn’t.  What would this have done to the team, I thought to myself?  Would it have put me at odds with the team leader and the cyclist who were weary of the nuisance of video anyway.

At times, I couldn’t think clearly enough to edit the segments.  I was doing the work of three or four people–shooting, interviewing, voicing, writing, editing, uploading, and disseminating.  After a while I worried I was getting the same shots over and over, and I was but that’s what was happening.  For large spans I had no cellular signal to upload.  I produced over thirty short videos during the nearly two weeks of the race.  During stretches I was awake over 48 hours, and conversely sound asleep with four or five people coming and going from the room where I slept.  I thank God I hadn’t seen the movie No Country for Old Men as I often was forced to go to sleep with motel doors unlocked so crew members could come and go as needed.

At some point during the race, I knew I had gained the trust and respect of my fellow crew members for my ability to function on so little sleep, to maintain a positive and upbeat attitude, and to remain neutral and avoid conflict.  At one point, someone even pointed out that they weren’t certain whose side I would be on in a conflict developing between the younger and older members of the crew.  When asked, I didn’t really answer the question.  I made a joke.  The fact is, I didn’t agree with every decision, I didn’t like everyone–young and old, but I focused on the job to be done and did it.  This is what it’s like to be in the midst of RAAM.

Good luck to all RAAM cyclists, but most of all good luck to all of your crew members. Be safe, be kind, be generous.  Remember cyclists, you couldn’t do this without your crew.  They are your biggest muscle that will get you through this endeavor, OR they can become the cramp or saddle sore that brings you to a halt if you forget their value.

Enjoy the ride!  Good luck to Team Race for Hope.

New Archiving Service for High School Athlete Highlight Reels

I’ve long had an internal debate about the best ways to provide the service of highlight reels to high school athletes and their families looking to garner attention from college recruiters.  I see families who don’t know where or how to start the process, while others spend hundreds or more without any plan for how to utilize it.   I’ve also seen flashy highlight reels with irrelevant or lackluster material that may prove detrimental to an athlete’s first impression.

By far the biggest problem is obtaining, gathering and maintaining a selection of clips which truly highlight a player’s ability.  Many families stress or lose interest in producing a video because of the time and expense of going through game footage to find usable clips or paying someone else to do it.  As a video professional I am very aware of how time consuming the process can be.  Add to it, saving the clips and keeping them organized for several years adds another level of difficulty that dissuades many families.

In an effort to streamline the process of saving and organizing clips over a one, two, or three year period, I have decided to offer a flat rate archiving feature.  For $175.00 a year, I will organize and store up to 20 identified video clips (:10 sec each or less) for use later in a highlight reel.  When the time comes to produce a highlight reel your clips are all in one place ready to be edited together.  There is no obligation to use Pawpro to edit the final highlight video from the archived footage.

In the end, archiving the footage provides a solution for overwhelmed families, and streamlines the editing process for me.

Please send me an email if you have any questions about archiving, or want to get started.

Fall into Pawpro

As the leaves begin to fall here in Washington, D.C., Pawpro is working on several projects.

Pawproobama

Three weeks left in the campaign and I’m putting the final touches on a Presidential Election video.  This pro-Obama video is to be released on YouTube within the next 5 days.

In November, I will resume night owl duty and a video presence for the second running of the Anything Is Possible 5K race, which is a national running event.  It’s held in cities all over the U.S. on the night the clocks turn back.

Logo-anything-is-possible-5k

This year that night is November 4 at 1:50 AM.  New to this year’s race, participants will receive a pair of PJ pants from Old Navy–while supplies last.  Each participating city provides its own unique after party.

Anything Is Possible 5K

Anything Is Possible 5K/ Atlanta

Pawpro Unveils RAAM stills of Len Forkas/Hopecam Effort

Today I am opening a gallery of photos taken while I followed Len Forkas in the 2012 Race Across America–a 3,000 mile, 12 day bike race.  The social media coverage provided by Pawpro was a substantial part of why Forkas and his non-profit, Hopecam.org was able to raise more than $300,000.

(shutterfly.com/pro/PawproMedia/PawproMedia)

Pawpro Media footage of Len Forkas compeating in Race Across America (RAAM) in 2012.

These are purely photos which is a distinction from the miles of video I compiled. In almost two weeks on the road, I only dedicated myself to shooting stills for a few hours total because of the priority to get video coverage and the limits on awake time, available wireless signals, editing time, and time being in proximity to Forkas to shoot footage. The collection will grow as I begin to review the video footage and create stills from certain moments of it.

When solo shooting a live event such as this the photographer/videographer must commit to one medium or the other for fear of capturing nothing if caught transitioning. The photographic moments either occur at a painstakingly slow or frustratingly unexpected pace. In sports gab, that means you must be on your toes at all times. If I had it to do again there would be things done differently, and other things that would be impossible to do differently under the same conditions. As an example, as much as I wanted to stay awake for 48 straight hours, sleep a few hours, rinse and repeat, no amount of Red Bull was going to keep me awake beyond a certain point. It was an experience that I will never forget. It took several weeks for my hand to recuperate from constantly holding the camera.

I was going to start this post by drawing the parallels between what was accomplished by Len Forkas and his Race Across America for Hopecam and Diana Nyad’s latest attempt to swim from Cuba to Florida. I was rooting for her, and remember how captured I was by her initial attempt back in the late ’70’s. It was that spirit for adventure that inspired me to join in the excitement of Race Across America. Then word came she had been pulled from the water–beaten by jellyfish, weather and sharks. My initial thought was, “I’m so relieved that there were no jellyfish or sharks to worry about in RAAM!” I don’t think the Hopecam crew would have survived as long as Nyad in such elements. As it happened, we didn’t have a drop of rain in our 11 day crossing of the U.S.

Thankfully, Len Forkas met with success in his endeavor. However, falling short at any extreme adventure comes with a fair amount of pride in having planned and made the attempt, at all. I am of the belief that so few can even claim to have conceived and committed to such outrageous challenges, that to have tried and stopped is no failure in the world of extreme sports. Although, I know that the individuals who commit to these challenges are rarely satisfied just by the attempt.

Untill the next adventure!

American Odyssey Relay 2012 Video Released

Newly released, the American Odyssey Relay video for 2012 produced and shot by Pawpro Media.  Don’t miss the most spirited team paying homage to comedian Will Ferrell by way of vintage 70’s athletic swag and exhibitionism with a penchant for public nudity.  All in a day’s work, I say!  It’s always great to work for race director, Bob Fleshner on this great event.

And speaking of events, seven days to go before Pawpro takes off for the start of Hopecam’s Race Across America.  We’ll be following Hopecam’s cyclist as he makes his way across the U.S. in 12 days in this infamous and awe inspiring event.  Follow our progress in real time on Facebook and Tumblr.  It starts June 13, 2012.

Cover Photo

Pawpro Loves GoPro

Perhaps it’s just the Valentine’s Day spirit, but I’ve got to say I just love the shots that come out of the GoPro Hero. The first Pawpro project to include GoPro footage is for Hopecam.org where we’ll focus on the founder’s upcoming cross-country bicycle trek in the famed Race Across America. Of course the Bicycle lends itself to some interesting angles, and the wide array of GoPro mounts oblige almost any angle.

This is just a sample of the possible shots. I’m sure there will be many other applications of its footage down the road. Just another tool that Pawpro can utilize to tell whatever story you need to tell.

Athletic Recruitment Videos/Highlight/Scouting Reels: Not All Are Created Equal

See sample highlight reel with all HD footage
Highlight video with animated graphics
Highlight video with basic graphics

Highlight Reel Sample

Not all highlight footage is equally created.  Pawpro produces high quality video footage of athletic teams or individual athletes which may be used as a coaching tool, or to highlight team and personal skills/strengths.  Be aware, this is more than just generic game footage which most highlight and recruiting reel companies are mass peddling to schools and parents.  Many companies produce footage that is grainy and out of focus.   Pawpro videotapes a game with HD cameras, so the footage is crystal clear.  See the difference between HD footage and standard definition (SD) footage in the two stills below.  These stills are both captured from one frame of video footage.  Notice that the field of view is larger with the HD footage, but also the details are sharper.  The difference is even more dramatic when the camera focuses on an individual player.

Standard definition (SD) still from video.
Pawpro (HD) still from video.
Pawpro HD still from video

The great advantage to parents, players and recruiters in today’s multimedia revolution is that your footage can be viewed readily and instantly via a link.  No need to snail mail endless DVDs and hope that they play for coaches and recruiters.  A highlight reel is an essential tool for serious athletes looking to maximize their college placement potential.

For teams and coaches, we do offer full season or multi-game, team video coverage.  Call or e-mail for pricing.

Pawpro Media will graphically and visually highlight your player by editing-down game footage to the best moments.  Videos may also include any stats or contact information.  ( We will compile footage shot by others.)

Highlight reel pricing depends on the amount of footage to be screened,  editing extras such as special effects, animated graphics, music, voiceover, and the number of finished minutes in the completed video.  Game footage pricing may vary depending on the number of games to be videotaped and the distance of travel to the game location.

Don’t expect to get a highlight reel out of one game’s footage.  That’s too much pressure on the athlete and the videographer.  We shoot what happens, we don’t make it happen.  Our best advice for producing the best highlight reel is to pay for a professional sports media outlet to shoot as many games as possible so that the athlete is given multiple chances to showcase her talent in front of the camera.  One game’s footage isn’t enough even for the best athlete.  A professional should ensure that the quality of the footage is high.

Experience The American Odyssey Relay

Click Photo to view
American Odyssey Relay Video

What a fun project this has been for me.  Experience The American Odyssey Relay, a thirty-six hour, 200 mile relay race including exhausted runners, smelly vans, comical and authentic moments, but most of all, tons of fun along the way.  Teams run day and night through some of the most historic and scenic countryside in PA, MD, WV, VA and DC.

A second video highlighting team t-shirts, van decorations, a.k.a VanGos, and general good-natured, craziness will be released very, very soon.

Top Ten Reasons You Need Video on Your Web Page–Seriously!!

  1. Does not stain your teeth.
  2. Just now coming to terms with the idea that your VHS movie collection is worthless.
  3. You’ve secretly wanted to find a way to get the entire office to do a dance routine on camera.
  4. You’ve got the music in you.
  5. This is the only way you can get Snooki to respond to your tweets.
  6. So you can forget about the Redskins’ latest loss.
  7. Think you might have a shot at the Tonight Show since Jay’s back as host.
  8. Trying to find Candy Mountain.
  9. Need an excuse for all the time you spend on YouTube.
  10. Rejected from Dancing with the Stars, yet again.

Video Content/Video Production Special Offer

Video your business
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Video Production VA, MD, DC
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Pawpro Media is offering a 10% discount for first time clients on their first video project.  Mention this offer when you contact us.

Whether it’s a promotional video for your Website, a video home tour, an athletic recruitment/highlight reel, or a fundraising video, Pawpro Media produces high quality, creative video content.