What’s been done & can I get back on track?
To understand some of what has and hasn’t been done probably requires a small understanding of our family dynamics. Their are the four of us Mom, dad and two sons. Together we form the partnership ClenchPICS LLC, whose acronym PICS had to change mid 2007 from “Personal Image & Computing Specialists” to “Professional Image & Composition Specialists” because son the younger, our resident I T genius and builder of computers, joined the Army to become a satellite communication systems installer - maintainer, which left doing the business (what there is of it) to Dad and son the elder, our resident video genius (B.F.A. in Film making from Five Towns College) who moved to Brooklyn in Dec. Okay we have Army dude, enrgeeman.com, Brooklyn guy, milkandchase.com, dad (sometimes referred to as Frank) who tells everybody we can do anything digital (and then worries out how) and Mom, the backbone of the business as she’s the one whose “real” job salary has been the true family income. Oh, yeah, in case you didn’t realize dad’s retired and, as both sons remind me, old.
I always liked gadgets and photography, so as the boys came along and video was becoming family reasonable (at least in my mind) and mom thought (translate, I convinced) looking at the videos would be more enjoyable then just the photo scrap books I acquired our first VCR. As this is the late 1980’s I’ve also started playing with these new fangled personal computers and even convinced mom computers would be such a big part of the boys lives we should get them each their own. So from about 1986 there have always been at least 3 computers in the house and I hate to admit it but truth be told if we could get even 10 cents on the dollar for all the “old” software (from still readable 5 1/4″ , 3 1/2″ ,CDs & DVDs) , old computers from 286’s up and the parts, cases and monitors around here I could probably pay 90% of our bills. As we heard of it or it came out we usually tried it, we still have like 6 of the original old Aviator wireless network creators from WebGear, an original Dazzle as well as a Dazzle DVC-50. In fact we’ll be putting much of this and a good deal of video equipment we have (including a working RCA ProWonder VCR) up for auction on eBay under my AOL screen name of gismomaker.
Yes, mom did like all the cute videos and no we probably haven’t watched most of them in years, but we do have them and can watch and hear them whenever we want and that’s the important thing. As the boys were growing up we started attending First Presbyterian Church of Babylon because of their Sunday School and other programs. The boys both played instruments (violin and cello) so it was natural for mom to usher them into playing in the Chime and later Bell choirs. While I always videoed their school concerts they were simply family affairs, but when we videoed the chime choir and music ministry concerts at church mom started asking me to make copies for the other parents, as the years past more people were asking for copies until we were typically making about 3 dozen copies.
About this time Brooklyn teamed up with two friends at church to make a short film Elijah’s Cave, which actually got the 3 of them invited to a film festival in Switzerland from which time his path to videoland was certainly etched in stone. Of course this lead us to bring a camera into the sanctuary to video baptisms and then give copies to the parents. That lead to “can we show a simulcast in Fellowship Hall for Easter in case of the usual overflow from the sanctuary”. Of course we were told go ahead, but it has to be with your equipment as the church doesn’t have any - so we did, 2 cameras, projector, switcher, about 1200′ of cabling, more than a weeks work from both sons and the help of about 6 young people on Easter Sunday. With the cameras and cabling already in place and the young people game to do it again thus started the Video Ministry. For a while we had Saturday afternoon video sessions where the young people not only had some fun making a number of short films , but really learned how to use the equipment, direct and produce the videos as well as do some editing.
When the bells needed overhauling and maintenance the music ministry asked to hold a concert with offering to try covering the cost, we were asked if it would be possible to somehow project some old video of the bells and possibly some animated video of bells as part of the concerts and oh yes could you make a DVD of the concert - we said of course, (more long nights, much more wiring and a number of added pieces of equipment) then realizing the concert was in fact 2 concerts on 2 nights we started planning what turned out to be the DVD S(ave) O(ur) S(ongs) “the best of both nights”. This naturally lead to a bell concert of the mostly high school seniors as their last concert together and the DVD “Blaze of Glory”
It was only a short step then with all the equipment in place and the enthusiasm of the young people working with us that we started recording every Sunday’s services. Some additional equipment, alott of experience and work from a dedicated group of young people and we were soon doing live edits to tape of every service. Additional equipment and it became live edit to DVD and copies available the day of the services.
Then the question is we’re showing video in Fellowship Hall and saying we have a contemporary service, so why aren’t we using video in the sanctuary. While our sanctuary doesn’t lend itself to a single screen and is over a hundred years old, it could have taken less then a year to agree on and put in the two screens and projectors we did, but it was worth it. This is where Army dude really got involved with the video ministry. (up till now he had only serviced all churches computers, networked most of them, got the copier online as a network printer and as part of our business completely wired BCS our churches school for the internet at cost.) He designed and built a computer, Linux based, to handle all the video inputs and separate outputs we could think of possibly needing or using at the time, which was good because we soon realized a 3rd screen was needed for the rear wall so the Praise team, leader, pastor and choir (we now use the projectors in our traditional service also) could see what everyone else is. This pretty much brings us up to last October with what we do at church, which is why we keep buying equipment for the business and praying we’ll eventually get the work to pay for it. Much of our week to week adventures with this ministry have been chronicled at milkandchase.com, which by the way is a whole story of its own, but if you want that story you’ll have to go the site and ask for it in the comments or emails.
From October to present next time.
January 30th, 2008 at 9:03 pm
Wow … when you say it, it sounds incredible! I think some of your chronology may be off (as well as grammar) but you do tell the tale wonderfully!
Will the next installment reflect the negative aspects primarily? or will you still try and spin it in a positive way? Or is this a PR exercise, leaving M&C.com to tell the nitty gritty technical details?
Anyway, good show ‘ol chap!
January 30th, 2008 at 9:57 pm
Its like - “falling with style” It may be compressed slightly, but then covering more than twenty years in seven paragraphs isn’t easy.
Negative aspects? Like living, there may have been some difficulties, but we’re constantly moving forward - that’s progress and positive. We’ve never had a glass that wasn’t part full and that’s the truth from my point of view.