『Call Sheet Confidential』のカバーアート

Call Sheet Confidential

Call Sheet Confidential

著者: Michael Samstag and Dave McCauley
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Call Sheet Confidential (formerly Old Guy Tech) is the definitive podcast for the modern video professional. Hosted by industry veterans Michael Samstag and Dave McCauley, this show explores the intersection of classic filmmaking experience and the rapid evolution of production technology.

We go beyond the spec sheets to deliver Battle-Tested Industry Insights. Each episode features candid interviews with world-class Directors of Photography, seasoned Owner-Operators, Creators, Crew, and industry leaders sharing hard-won lessons from the set. We dive deep into the business side of video production, discussing how to navigate shifting markets, manage sustainable careers, and make smart investments in the era of AI and automation.

Whether discussing the soul of vintage glass, the reliability of an FX9, or the frontier of generative video, our focus is always practical. Old Guy Tech is for creators who know that while tools change, the business of storytelling remains your most important asset.

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  • A Show For the Whole Crew: Introducing Call Sheet Confidential
    2026/06/20

    After nine episodes of technical deep dives, we are moving the needle. Welcome to Call Sheet Confidential! The name was a vestigial constraint that failed to reflect the reality of today's sets. We’re doubling down on our commitment to inclusivity, moving past the "Old Guy" optics to foster a production community that mirrors the actual diversity of talent currently executing high-end work.

    What to expect in this episode:

    The Rebrand Strategy: Why we’re shifting focus to be more inclusive and how that expands our technical network.

    New Technical Segment: "Three Things Creators Can Steal." We analyze how to deconstruct high-retention storytelling devices and apply those techniques to your own project's narrative structure.

    The Popcorn Files: A deep dive into the logistics of massive franchise sets and the technical realities of managing large-scale film productions.

    Community Standards: How we’re positioning the show to serve creators of all backgrounds who prioritize craft over clout. We aren't changing the mission—we're scaling the delivery. If you’re here to sharpen your technical edge and refine your production workflow, you’re in the right place.

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    20 分
  • From Community Cable Access to Network Showrunner: Keith Thomas
    2026/06/02

    Episode Intro: Michael and Dave kick off the episode with a technical breakdown of secondary camera logistics. Dave evaluates the utility of the Sony Alpha 7R6 as a hybrid companion format to his primary FX9 payload, weighing its uncropped 4K/120fps output against a high price point and the absence of open-gate support. Michael introduces the parameters of the Canon EOS R6V—noting its 7K open-gate capture and integrated cooling fan—before explaining why a used Canon C70 running dedicated look-profiles remains the mathematically sound choice for seamless matching on our timeline.

    Featured Interview: Following the hardware breakdown, we transition straight into an elite technical post-mortem with veteran producer and former Magnolia Network executive Keith Thomas. Keith traces his operational footprint from community cable access in 1990 to managing premium, long-form narrative infrastructure.

    Key Technical & Workflow Architecture:

    • The Location Audio Masterclass: Keith details why tracking location sound offers the industry’s most comprehensive education in performance assessment, multi-mic wireless placement, and scene geometry. This specific footprint forces an operator to monitor phase variance, RF interference, and environmental acoustics while tracking narrative pacing simultaneously.
    • The Missy Elliott Beta SP Drum Failure: A retrospective on field engineering under immediate distress. Keith reviews an E! True Hollywood Stories field shoot halted by a critical tape drum malfunction on a legacy Beta SP deck, outlining the specific redundancy planning required to protect delivery windows when hot tungsten packages limit shooting time.
    • The Structural Cost of Unlatched Flight Cases: A zero-tolerance reminder for camera utilities and assistants. Keith logs the physical impact data and financial loss of lifting an unlatched flight case, causing six premium Zeiss prime lenses to drop directly onto bare concrete.
    • Deploying Legacy Iron on Modern Digital Timelines: Keith maps out his current technical approach for his upcoming June wellness documentary. The architecture relies on two first-generation Canon C300 bodies paired with Canon CN-E primes. This combination optimizes highlight roll-off and skin tone rendering, purposely bypassing the overly sharp, clinical aesthetic of modern, high-megapixel digital sensors.
    • The Sub-$1,000 Training Tool: Why a second-hand Sony FS7 body represents a highly precise, cost-effective asset for incoming crew to master industry-standard menu navigation, physical payload management, and assignable button configurations.

    Production Hardware Baseline Reference:

    • Primary Digital Formats: Sony FX9, Canon C70
    • Secondary / Hybrid Formats: Sony Alpha 7R6, Canon EOS R6V, Blackmagic Pocket Cinema Camera 4K
    • Legacy Engineering Iron: Canon C300 Mark I, Sony FS7, Sony Beta SP
    • Optics Arrays: Canon CN-E Primes, Zeiss Prime Lenses, Canon L-Series Glass

    If you’ve ever lifted a flight case only to watch your prime glass hit the concrete, outline your engineering backup plan in the comments. Like, subscribe, and verify your latches to keep your signal clean.

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    36 分
  • The Anatomy of the Grid & Battle-Tested Rock 'n' Roll Lighting with Randy Read
    2026/05/19

    If you think modern LED programming on a cinema set is stressful, try operating an analog console while calling six carbon-arc Super Trooper spotlights over the roaring crowd of a 1970s Marshall Tucker Band stadium show.

    This week on Old Guy Tech, Dave McCauley and I are breaking down the massive industry news of the day—the end of an era as ARRI changes family ownership after more than a century. How is this move into the live broadcast and sports market going to affect the cinema glass and camera bodies we know and love?

    Then, Dave sits down with a true legend of the lighting grid, Randy Read. Randy brings over 40 years of battle-tested, high-end production expertise to the table—from touring with rock 'n' roll icons to his tenure at Cinetel Productions, Scripps Networks, and designing broadcast studios globally for ARRI.

    #Inside the Episode:

    The ARRI Acquisition:*We analyze the acquisition of the world's leading camera and lighting ecosystem by Thomas Riedel and what it means for the future of cinema post-production pipelines.

    Psychedelic Pre-Show Origins: How Randy got his start at 19 using food dye, oil, water, and overhead projectors to create live, music-reactive visuals behind touring bands.

    The "Super Trooper" Era: A look back at pure analog lighting rigs—manually syncing 180 Par cans, Leekos, and carbon-arc spotlights before software automation took over the industry.

    The Bill-Payer's Eye: The brutal truth every young filmmaker needs to learn early: "Beauty is not in the eye of the beholder; beauty is in the eye of the person who writes the check."

    The Multiple-Camera Art: Why true multi-cam set lighting is a dying breed, the raw horsepower and foot-candles required to pull exposure on older tube cameras, and why knowing the math behind amperage and power distribution separates the real lighting directors from the CAD drafters.

    Check your feeds, lock down your power distribution, and listen to an elite professional who has truly lit it all.

    What's the oldest piece of lighting iron or analog gear you've ever had to handle on a professional location?

    Drop your crew stories in the comments.

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    36 分
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