So, You Have To Make A Podcast?

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Lights – Reading Your Lighting Environment Quiz

  1. 1. What frame rate is considered cinematic and what is standard broadcast?

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  2. 2. What does the course mean when it says Scenario 3 crosses the real show threshold?

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  3. 3. The course emphasizes mastering Scenario 1 fundamentals even if a student owns professional equipment because troubleshooting and environmental control skills transfer to every higher scenario.

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  4. 4. A student has $75 to improve their smartphone recording setup. What single purchase do you recommend?

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  5. 5. At what scenario level does background blur become achievable in-camera?

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  6. 6. How far from the speaker should a table microphone be placed?

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  7. 7. Where should a lavalier microphone be clipped on a subject?

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  8. 8. What is the single most impactful upgrade from Scenario 1 to Scenario 2?

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  9. 9. What is the approximate budget range for the Intermediate Setup at Scenario 3?

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  10. 10. What are the five equipment scenarios covered in this course from simplest to most advanced?

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  11. 11. You have a window on the left wall and a warm desk lamp on the right. Is this setup usable for recording?

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  12. 12. According to Vilmos Zsigmond, what is the best way to know when there is good lighting?

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  13. 13. A colleague’s recording shows the subject with a green cast and deep eye shadows. What are the two problems?

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  14. 14. You only have one light. How do you create fill on the opposite side?

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  15. 15. Your subject appears as a dark silhouette on camera. What is the likely cause and fix?

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  16. 16. What is color temperature and why does mixing temperatures cause problems?

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  17. 17. What is the purpose of the Hand Test?

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  18. 18. Where should the key light be positioned relative to the subject?

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  19. 19. What are the three lights in a standard three-point lighting setup?

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  20. 20. What does it mean when you see harsh shadows under a subject’s eyes during the Face Check?

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  21. 21. If your recording space only allows 3 feet between the subject and wall, what could you do to maximize the depth effect?

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  22. 22. A wall-adjacent recording is easy to fix in post-production by adding blur and adjusting shadows after the fact.

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  23. 23. You compare two photos: one with the subject against a wall and one with 5 feet of space behind them. Which difference would you expect to see?

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  24. 24. You walk into a room and your subject is seated directly against a bookshelf. What is the first adjustment you make?

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  25. 25. What is separation in the context of video production?

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  26. 26. Which of the following is NOT an advantage of having space between your subject and the background?

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  27. 27. Placing a subject against a wall limits your production options because it eliminates space for backlighting and creates flat images with visible wall imperfections.

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  28. 28. What is the minimum recommended distance between a subject and the wall behind them?

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  29. 29. What is the term for the distance between the nearest and farthest objects in a scene that appear acceptably sharp?

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