TVB Europe
After
Channel 4 took over free to air F1 coverage for the start of the 2016
season it put Whistle Films in the driving seat.
https://twitter.com/presteigneuk/status/719825291863056384/photo/1
https://twitter.com/presteigneuk/status/719825291863056384/photo/1
One
of the prized contracts in the outside broadcast calendar went to
Whistle Films earlier this year, an award that caused some
controversy.
The
indie, which formed in 2010, is backed by Channel 4 as part of its
Growth Fund and for which the broadcaster took a small stake in the
company. When the BBC divested itself early of terrestrial UK rights
to cover Formula 1 at the end of the 2015 season, Channel 4 took up
the reigns and put the presentation of it out to tender.
Established
by Sunil Patel who oversaw
the BBC’s F1 output before leaving to launch Whisper,
BT Sport presenter Jake Humphrey and ex-F1 driver David Coulthard,
Whisper beat more seasoned sports producers like North One – which
produced ITV's recent coverage – to the chequered flag.
Sunhil
is unfazed by suggestions in the press of favouritism. “The
pressure to succeed because we had this high profile win doesn't come
into it. The pressure comes from all those on our team to deliver on
our own high expectations. We are duty bound to keep fans entertained
and to improve coverage where we can – there is no added pressure
from any other party.”
Because
of the tight nine week turnaround between landing the contract in
mid-January and the start of the 2016 season in Australia – nearly
two weeks of which was required for shipping equipment to Melbourne –
Whisper wisely decided to rehire Presteigne
Broadcast Hire
as its OB partner.
Presteigne
had designed and supplied F1 flypacks complete with air
conditioning and power distribution systems
for the previous seven years of BBC broadcasts and had the kit ready
to go at its HQ in Crawley.
It also supplies up to 15 crew including sound ops and engineers.
“By
and large we are using the same kit as the BBC operation with one
major uplift in editing,” explains Patel, who
will executive produce C4’s coverage.
BBC Sport had made a fateful decision to base its editing on Final
Cut Pro 7 in 2011 just as Apple decided it would no longer support a
professional version of the software. A sensible decision then for
Patel to swap the suites out for four new ones of Adobe Premier.
On
site, these are linked with EVS IP Director logging and search tools,
themselves integrated with a trio of EVS XT3 servers and further
hooked into an EditShare rack of collaborative storage. The rest of
the kit contained in two flypacks remains the same and includes a
Ross switcher, Lavo sound desk and Riedel Artist for talkback with
the only other significant addition being a Sony PMW-F5 with Canon
Cine lenses to work alongside conventional RF cams.
“This
will give us a real cinematic look for feature making, content we are
familiar with given our heritage of branded high end content,” says
Patel.
Whisper
has created a range of brand-funded sports content in association
with companies such as Red Bull, UBS, Shell and Hugo Boss. It
has also won conventional TV commissions such as BBC1 doc Racing
With The Hamiltons: Nic In The Driving Seat,
and produced highlights for ITV4’s coverage of DTM
German Touring Cars.
Whisper also produced BBC2’s NFL studio presented highlights in the
run up to the Superbowl 50 introducing a touchscreeen for pundit
analysis.
Patel
said he decided to apply for Growth Fund investment when TV
commissions began to “dry up”, and he felt that C4’s backing
would give Whisper “credibility” and better access to
commissioners.
Formula
One Management (FOM) run a strict and well-oiled machine. Rights
holders have to join them at the F1 sting 5 minutes prior to race
start and only leave the host feed once the podium ceremony is over
at the end. In between rights can only tailor presentation with
commentary.
“There
is limited opportunity to do anything within the sport itself but the
real difference is around the presentation aspect, hence our
commitment to our talent line up,” says Patel. “The difference
will be in the insight we can give to viewers from the people we have
on in the pit lane and paddock.”
The
FOM set-up is deliberately formulaic across the world. “There are
new places – such as Baku and Mexico for 2016 - which we will be
keeping a watch over this year but each venue has its own unique
challenges,” comments Presteigne
head of technology, David O'Carroll.
All
the opening sequences and feature material is stored and played off
the EVS. A catalogue of historic race material is also held there.
“For example, if Lewis Hamilton does something special in practice
or race day and he refers to a previous race we do have the ability
to find that moment he is talking about and play that incident as
live,” says Patel. “It's just a question of searching for the
clip logged in IP Director.”
Much
of the chatter in outside broadcast circles is about how technologies
such as IP can be used to cut the costs of sending crew and kit to
events around the world. The F1 flypack and its dozen or so engineers
and technicians are already a slim-line production.
“The
only aspect I can see coming back to the UK would be editing which
won't happen until the cost of fibre reduces and internet speeds
increase,” says Patel. “The next generation of IP-enabled kit
might hold the key to saving costs instead of transporting kit and
the cost of hotels.”
Perhaps
more than any other sport, Grand Prix racing would seem to lend
itself to a higher resolution yet despite dabbling in stereo 3D and
making the most of advanced wireless technology, FOM's coverage
remains resolutely HD for this season at least.
“In
principal we could supply 4K in the pods with some minor
alterations,” says O'Carroll. “What is more challenging is the
reliance on RF acorss the site. There's not a viable 4K link that
would allow us to acquire 4K. That said, we can upconvert 50p from
the camera which would look pretty good, if not true 4K.”
“Given
the detail and design of the cars 4K would be amazing for Formula One
but until a platform like Sky (which is broadcasting the rest of F1
schedule in the UK) offers 4K to consumers then I can't see it
happening,” says Patel. “It will take a year or two.”
With
a contract for ten races a year until 2018 the indie will be in the
best place to anticipate an upgrade should FOM – or Channel 4 –
decide to up the ante.
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