Lloyd Ubshura
February 9th, 2012, 05:11 PM
Not sure if anyone on here can point me in the right direction, but after reading some of the very detailed and well-though-out posts on this forum today, I figured it's worth a shot to at least see. There's a question down near the bottom if you want to bypass my story.
If you want to read it, kick back, grab a hot tea, and travel with me in my journey into the world of video production.
If you're new to this business and are hoping for a nicely laid-out road-map so you can get into this business too, I'd suggest looking in the books section on Amazon (where I should have started). My journey has so many detours and wrong turns, it's certainly not something you want to imitate, at least entirely.
What started out as just a hobby and something fun and meaningful we could do in our leisure time, has slowly now turned into a full-time job for myself and 4 people for the last 1.5 years.
I had a vision of producing a high-quality TV show for kids through our 501c3 non-profit as a form of ministry, totally unique from anything else that's on Christian TV today.
I invested my family's life and essentially all the money I've ever made and had a studio built, spent six figures in miscellaneous camera and editing gear and hit the ground running... learning the hard way that it takes more than just being good on computers and having good shot composition behind cameras... it's a lot harder to own and operate a production studio than I thought being the simpleton on the outside.
"Ahh... just get a couple cameras, slap up some lights and out will come an awesome TV show," is what the typical outsider thinks. Then once you're up and running you look at the two lights you slapped up and say, "dang, that doesn't look anything like what I see on TV--even on PBS... in the 1970s!" So, instead of being satisfied being a simple (read, cheesy) show not really intended for a large market, we decided to do what your mom and mine always told us. You know it by heart, don't you? "If something is worth doing at all, it's worth doing right." Ahh, mom. Gott'a love her! But the phrase she didn't say right after, which she SHOULD have is, "easier said than done."
So we wanted to do it "right" and got more and more gear (and a LOT more knowledge and real-world experience, thankfully) and the next thing you know, we were fully committed to a much bigger operation than ever envisioned at first.
Looking back on how things have gone, I see clearly how this has become a cart-before-the-horse scenario. What seems like millions of man-hours later, we now have six 28:30 minute shows 100% done and another seven shows ranging from 80-99% complete to make our 13 show series.
My big question, you ask? I thought you had forgotten! Thanks for the reminder.
I know I did things backwards. I invested a fortune into a specialized product without having a buyer. (What exactly DID I learn in Marketing 101?) If you're not a Christian, I admit this part will sound silly and dumb, I'm sure. If you are a Christian, this should make perfect sense. So many doors opened up for this to morph from a vague concept to a tangible reality (too many to be just a streak of good luck), that as the doors opened before us, we knew we had to step through. We felt that even though we couldn't see how this would end up, and that most times we didn't even know how were were going to pay for next week, the Lord always came through and here we are 3 years later with a nearly completed series. During the process, we didn't know how we would ever finish one show (let alone thirteen) and what we would do when we got here, but here we are nonetheless. At the start, we certainly didn't see all the doors open before us. We saw just one at a time. But we got here, 100 doors later, by passing through each, one by one.
But the question!?! Oh yes, sorry. The question, ahem... questions:
Now that I have a series done, HOW do I get it out there on TV networks? How do I find a buyer (or buyers) for the show to help offset all the expenses? How much do Christian networks pay for a season series? How can I take this show from just sitting on a Bluray disc to something the TV viewers can watch?
"Well, duh, these are the very questions you should have asked before buying your first light bulb, genius!" Yeah, your right. I know. But here I am now, TODAY, with a finished series in my hand and another mysterious door before me. What's my next step? What is that door?
If you want to read it, kick back, grab a hot tea, and travel with me in my journey into the world of video production.
If you're new to this business and are hoping for a nicely laid-out road-map so you can get into this business too, I'd suggest looking in the books section on Amazon (where I should have started). My journey has so many detours and wrong turns, it's certainly not something you want to imitate, at least entirely.
What started out as just a hobby and something fun and meaningful we could do in our leisure time, has slowly now turned into a full-time job for myself and 4 people for the last 1.5 years.
I had a vision of producing a high-quality TV show for kids through our 501c3 non-profit as a form of ministry, totally unique from anything else that's on Christian TV today.
I invested my family's life and essentially all the money I've ever made and had a studio built, spent six figures in miscellaneous camera and editing gear and hit the ground running... learning the hard way that it takes more than just being good on computers and having good shot composition behind cameras... it's a lot harder to own and operate a production studio than I thought being the simpleton on the outside.
"Ahh... just get a couple cameras, slap up some lights and out will come an awesome TV show," is what the typical outsider thinks. Then once you're up and running you look at the two lights you slapped up and say, "dang, that doesn't look anything like what I see on TV--even on PBS... in the 1970s!" So, instead of being satisfied being a simple (read, cheesy) show not really intended for a large market, we decided to do what your mom and mine always told us. You know it by heart, don't you? "If something is worth doing at all, it's worth doing right." Ahh, mom. Gott'a love her! But the phrase she didn't say right after, which she SHOULD have is, "easier said than done."
So we wanted to do it "right" and got more and more gear (and a LOT more knowledge and real-world experience, thankfully) and the next thing you know, we were fully committed to a much bigger operation than ever envisioned at first.
Looking back on how things have gone, I see clearly how this has become a cart-before-the-horse scenario. What seems like millions of man-hours later, we now have six 28:30 minute shows 100% done and another seven shows ranging from 80-99% complete to make our 13 show series.
My big question, you ask? I thought you had forgotten! Thanks for the reminder.
I know I did things backwards. I invested a fortune into a specialized product without having a buyer. (What exactly DID I learn in Marketing 101?) If you're not a Christian, I admit this part will sound silly and dumb, I'm sure. If you are a Christian, this should make perfect sense. So many doors opened up for this to morph from a vague concept to a tangible reality (too many to be just a streak of good luck), that as the doors opened before us, we knew we had to step through. We felt that even though we couldn't see how this would end up, and that most times we didn't even know how were were going to pay for next week, the Lord always came through and here we are 3 years later with a nearly completed series. During the process, we didn't know how we would ever finish one show (let alone thirteen) and what we would do when we got here, but here we are nonetheless. At the start, we certainly didn't see all the doors open before us. We saw just one at a time. But we got here, 100 doors later, by passing through each, one by one.
But the question!?! Oh yes, sorry. The question, ahem... questions:
Now that I have a series done, HOW do I get it out there on TV networks? How do I find a buyer (or buyers) for the show to help offset all the expenses? How much do Christian networks pay for a season series? How can I take this show from just sitting on a Bluray disc to something the TV viewers can watch?
"Well, duh, these are the very questions you should have asked before buying your first light bulb, genius!" Yeah, your right. I know. But here I am now, TODAY, with a finished series in my hand and another mysterious door before me. What's my next step? What is that door?