In the above scenario, the bare minimum would be to conduct a video chat session for the purpose of communication and video/audio monitoring. All of the above must happen with minimal latency, good video and audio quality and under the constraints of the available internet connection. The interviewees need to see and hear the Producer as well. The Producer is conducting the actual interview and needs to see and hear a live camera feed. The director needs to see the camera shots and provide real time feedback to the camera operator for shot framing. Interviews for a documentary in a residential area of Washington DC are being shot by a local crew but travel restrictions prevent the director and producers from being present. This approach has worked, sometimes at the expense of image quality, audio quality and creative intent. The initial response has been to rely on consumer tools for audio and video capture as well as for remote viewing and interacting with crew and talent. The COVID-19 pandemic has forced the creative media world to work under constraints that have required adapting and thinking out of the box in order to create engaging content. How is interactive remote production relevant to my show? We expect that you seek further advice from your Production, Post and Legal teams prior to implementing the technical guidance herein in order to follow both medical and civil regulations in each respective area of filming. Please note that this document references best practices from a technical standpoint only.
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