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SuperBowl in wireless HD!!



30 Jan 2006 07:05:13 -0800 rec.arts.tv
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Goro...
I'm only "meh" on the teams, but this sounds like it'll LOOK awesome on
my 50" DLP. BCS Bowls looked great and it's sounding like the
Superbowl is going to up the ante.

The only question left is Will the COMMERCIALS be in HD or not?! :)

-goro-

ABC Sports Prepares for HD Super Bowl XL

Detroit winter weather may present the biggest challenge

by Ken Freed

DETROIT: When ABC Sports cameras zoom in on the football for the
opening kickoff of Super Bowl XL in Detroit's Ford Field at 6 p.m. on
Feb. 5, more than 130 million viewers in the United States and perhaps
1 billion viewers worldwide will see the most technologically advanced
Super Bowl ever.

"Sports is always at the cutting edge of hi-tech on television," said
George Hoover, senior vice president of engineering at NEP
Supershooters, the mobile division of NEP Broadcasting in Pittsburgh
that will bring three trucks to Super Bowl XL. "Since the first super
slo-mo cameras five years ago, the NFL is generally a driving force for
new TV technology." NEP is bringing Supershooter 26, the HDTV rig used
to shoot Monday Night Football on ABC for the past three seasons, to
the event. NEP also is bringing in Supershooter 20, the HDTV truck used
to shoot Sunday Night Football for ESPN.

The three-and-a-half hour pre-game show and the shorter post-game show
will be shot in HD using Supershooter 18.

Separately, the Denali Silver truck will be used for the "Bigger Bang"
half-time show featuring the Rolling Stones, sponsored by Sprint Nextel
and produced by Don Mischer Productions, which did last year's Super
Bowl half-time show with Paul McCartney in Jacksonville, Fla.

As with previous Super Bowls, there will be lots of eye-catching
commercials during the breaks.

"Last year, there were 26 commercials in HD," said ABC Sports spokesman
Mark Mandel, "and we expect at least that many this year."

Jay Gleeson, manager of remote operations for ABC TV, said all the NEP
trucks will use Thomson Grass Valley WorldCam cameras equipped with
Canon lenses. Grass Valley switchers will control the video, all
recorded on Grass Valley VTRs. The HD gear will be backed up by several
Sony slo-mo cameras, plus a Panasonic camera for the ESPN SkyCam, a
Panasonic POV, and Harris encoders and decoders.

HI-DEF RF

ABC Sports plans to use at least one hi-def RF camera, Gleeson said. At
press time, it had not yet been decided whether to use a camera
supplied by Link Research in the United Kingdom, (represented in the
United States by Ariel Video System) or one from Total RF in Bensalem,
Pa. Both of these handheld cameras performed well, he said, so the
final decision will hinge on pricing.

"The HD RF camera selected will be all over the place," Gleeson said,
"We'll go wherever we can't get with a cable camera, especially behind
the benches where running cable is a major issue for the teams. We also
will be able to walk up into the stands to get shots of the fans or see
the game from their perspective, providing we can do this without
blocking the view of the fans behind us, or we may go out to the
concession areas."

ABC's biggest challenge with the RF camera will be the lack of any
return video for the camera operator to frame shots incorporating
graphics, Gleeson said.

"We had two vendors come up with possible solutions, but things did not
work as we'd hoped," he said.

ABC Sports next considered having someone with a small RF monitor walk
with the camera operator, he said, "but then the camera operator would
have to look away from the eyepiece to consult the external monitor to
frame a shot, and we can't have that. So, because at this late date we
do not expect to find a solution, we're going with no solution."

Instead, Gleeson said, the director will have to talk the RF camera
operators through each shot, telling them to tilt or pan to accommodate
the graphics with various game stats. Another option might be to frame
an RF camera shot within an insert window.

ABC Sports also experimented with a point-to-point cable camera on a
boom 15 feet above the sidelines at a pre-season game in Ford Field
last August. A Panasonic 800 HD camera was rigged and operated by the
SkyCam crew.

"We found that, as when camera and crew went up and down the field,
they kept getting in the way of the fixed camera positions, which was
more annoying than anything else. This was going to be our big, flashy
technical innovation for the Super Bowl this year, but after we'd
actually tried it in the same venue as the Super Bowl, we had to let go
of that idea," Gleeson said.

ABC Sports will field test the Sony advanced prototype HD super slo-mo
camera system, according to Robert Willox, director of marketing for

Tim V....
Any idea if they will have the copy-protection bit set so we can record the
game?

content creation at Sony Electronics. He said the world's first 3x
super slo-mo camera captures video at 180 fps in multiple HD formats,
from 720p to 1080i, "so the camera will be useful for NBC or CBS the
next time they air the Super Bowl." Several engineers from the Sony
design center in Atsugi, Japan, will baby-sit the prototype during
game, according to Willox. Sony also is providing its Cinealta HDW-F900

Leopold Stotch...
I saw a demo of this camera at a trade show in Tokyo last November, and it
is fairly amazing. The demo in the Sony booth was of a mock baseball game,
with actors for the pitcher, catcher and batter. The batter didn't swing at
anything, so the camera showed replays in slow motion of the pitch. It was
very impressive to see HD quality on a slow-motion image.

While on this topic, I have a story that would be of interest to many
rsfckers. All of the camera vendors used sets with lots of colorful stuff -
and hawt Japanese model chyx - as subjects. It was amusing to see what the
booth customers would be zooming in on....

camera, which will shoot HD 1080p at 24 fps for archive material to be
created by NFL Films.

LENSES

The camera lenses at Super Bowl XL will reflect the latest technical
improvements, said Gordon Tubbs, assistant director of marketing for
the broadcast division of Canon Broadcast USA, provider of all the
lenses used in six Super Bowls.

Supporting close-ups will be box-style XJ series 75x, 86x and 100x
lenses, including the new HJ18ex28B lens, used for the stationary
cameras and the smaller remote-control cameras mounted on the
crossbeams of the goalposts. The cameras on the field and in the locker
room will use HJ series ENG-style portable 40x telephoto or 2:1 zoom
wide-angle lenses. The super slo-mo cameras will use a combination of
these lenses, Tubbs said.

"The biggest thing this year is that all of our high-end lenses now
feature Canon's advanced Optical Image Stabilization system," he said.
"Image stabilization built into the lens is critical for a sports event
like the Super Bowl, where the director needs really long shots with
extreme close-ups of the player's faces."

Willox said HD itself now makes it possible to deliver those close-ups
in greater details than ever before.

"In the old days, the cameras could barely penetrate the shadows under
the helmets, so the players all looked like Darth Vader. Now, because
of HD, you not only can see the sweat on their faces when watching at
home, you see their state of being, which brings a whole new emotional
level to viewing the game," he said.

Bill Steele...
Yes, let's have lots more closeups, and only cut to the overall view at
the *last possible second* before the snap. We're all much more
interested in the players' emotions than in where the ball's going.


Yet for all the blessings of HD gear, ABC Sports still faces some major
hurdles in broadcasting Super Bowl XL from Detroit in mid-winter.

"Our biggest challenge may be the weather," Gleeson said. "All those
under the dome in Ford Field will be toasty warm, but what about all
the people out in the parking lot? If they have to troubleshoot a cable
that's buried under ice, not only will they have to contend with the
cold, but they could do more damage to the cable than anything else. Or
else suppose someone steps on an audio cable? That crunching sound
underfoot may be the brittle cable breaking, and then what happens to
the audio signals?"

Gleeson said ABC Sports and NEP are backing up everything, "but there
could be problems from slower recovery time in the cold weather."

ABC explored covering the entire compound with a big tent, but the city
of Detroit objected because driving long metal stakes into the pavement
risked hitting underground electrical conduits. After an ice-skating
rink dome collapsed under heavy snow in Europe late last year, "that
whole idea went away," Gleeson said.

Another challenge will be the outside cabling.

"In the past world of SD," Gleeson said, "you could run triax cable
forever, but you can't pump an HD signal much more than 2,500 feet.
Since the trucks will be 900 feet from the outside input-output panels
at Ford Field, this poses some real difficulties for us."

Hoover at NEP agreed that the weather may pose some obstacles. "We
expect that it's going to be quite cold in Detroit in February, not
quite like being in Florida last year. So, I worry about the wires and
cables freezing."

Curmudgeon...
A coupla commercials might be...most will not be HD

Sanderson...
It says here that more than half will be HD.


DanR...
But the guy said "Last year, there were 26 commercials in HD," said ABC Sports
spokesman
Mark Mandel, "and we expect at least that many this year."
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