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Jonah Kessel captures unusual Chinese protests in Wukan for the NYT – with Canon 60D and 5D mkII

By Jonah Kessel

Wukan Video Journal from Jonah Kessel on Vimeo.

Using a fat Chinese man, a large backpack, a baseball cap and the hood from my sweatshirt, I attempted to hide myself.

I was sandwiched in between the beefy man and a f-stop Satori backpack jammed with gear on the rear of his motorcycle. He drove me down a dark dirt road in the middle of the night near the uniquely autonomous village of Wukan, Guangdong Province, China.

I was hiding from police and those who might not want attention drawn to the small village of about 13,000 people.

Earlier in the week, pissed off villagers had overthrown their leaders and in mass numbers chased the police out of town. When the police came back, they set up barriers and created a stronghold in their fishing community, only letting sympathizers and foreign journalists into the village. These outsiders started to grow in numbers and after a couple of days, a small media circus had developed.

Village Town Meeting

The New York Times’ Edward Wong described the situation like this:

“The outsiders had come to see how furious residents had transformed their village on China’s southeast coast into a temporarily autonomous zone. Their anger focused on two issues: what they called illegal land sales by village officials, and the death on Dec. 11 of a village advocate while he was in police custody. The villagers chased out Communist Party officials, repelled an assault by police officers and barricaded all roads leading into Wukan with tree trunks. The two police stations in the village stood empty. So did the headquarters of the Communist Party committee.”

The villagers used this media circus and created a bit of a propaganda war. They shared their homes and food with us and drove us around on their motorcycles whenever we needed. This was a funny sight: I would be on the back of a motorcycle with a DSLR rig hung to the side, flying through small alleys and passing other motorcycles — all carrying journalists on the back as well.

Taking down protest banners

With the global spotlight on this village, provincial officials were cornered and agreed to start negotiations with the angry mob.

Within 24 hours I filed one basic news video and one video journal (above) on my experience in Wukan. The video journal was paired with a text journal by Edward Wong. You can read his story “Canny Villagers Grasp Keys to Loosen China’s Muzzle” here. I shot mainly with one camera and a prime 24mm lens. While I love using jibs, sliders and mechanical movement, this video journal seemed most real shot hand-held.

While there was a lot of media there, I was the only DSLR video shooter (that I saw). All other newspapers, TV stations and wire service photographers were using standard video cameras — and with good reason. This was a tricky shoot and using a standard camera would certainly have been easier.

However, I knew it would be tricky and planned accordingly. Before I left I was told to pack light — bring no bells or whistles. Nothing extra. There would be limited car space, I would be riding by motorcycle and I would most likely have to run, so should bring only one bag.

Kit Assembled/Deassembled

Knowing this I created a really small franken-rig and minimized everywhere I could. Above, you can see what the franken-rig looked like disassembled and in use.

Above: f-stop Satori bag, Blackrapid RS-7 strap with Canon 60D with Canon 70-200 f/2.8 L USM, Canon 5DMII with Canon 24mm f/1.4 L USM, 2x Redrock Micro microHandGrip (Part # 2-19-0009), Redrock Micro Handlebar clamp (Part # 2-017-0002), 2x 18″ 15mm carbon fiber rods (Part # 8-011-0002), Porta Brace Universal Shoulder Pad, Jag35 Top Handle, Jag35 Tripod Plate Pro, Jag35 Quick Release Gorilla Stand with Zucoto Gorilla Plate, D | Focus Follow Focus, Jag35 90 Degree Clamp with ball head attached to a Ruige 5″ TL-S500 On-camera HD LCD monitor, Genus Counterweight for CSMK Shoulder Mount System (3.5 lb) and topped with a Rode VideoMic Pro Compact Shotgun Microphone.

I got all of this to fit into a single f-stop bag. The rig was small enough to fight for territory in press scrums and stable enough to run around in a less than stable environment.

Press Scrum

This setup was also small enough to take onto a plane without checking anything. I kept one small tripod with me — although I barely used it.

The videos were largely edited during during the middle of the night or in the back of moving cars as I was fighting US East coast deadlines.

To see the strange conclusion to this story see my blog post “Wukan Journal Unfinished.” To see how this story unfolded check out these stories:

Jonah M. Kessel is a Beijing based freelance visual journalist working with the New York Times. See his web site here and follow him on Twitter here.

Posted on December 28th, 2011 by Jonah Kessel | Category: Camera bags, Camera support systems, Canon Eos5DmkII, Canon Eos60D, DSLR video news, Journalism | Permalink | Comments (0)

NAB 2011 – Ikan’s new Multi-K XL LED light, shoulder rig parts, bags, table dolly and VX7e monitor

There was plenty on show at NAB from Ikan this year. There was their new offset design shoulder rig with new baseplate options and shoulder pad. They also had a nice looking table top dolly.

A Ikan DSLR rig with some of their new parts

Ikan table top dolly system

They also showed the new VX7e monitor, an upgraded version of last year’s VX7 which adds peaking and false colour features.

Then there is the Multi-K XL, an innovative LED lighting panel with dial-in variable colour temperature.

Lastly Ikan also showed a new line of camera and accessory bags.

The new Ikan bag line

Posted on April 16th, 2011 by Dan Chung | Category: Camera bags, Camera support systems, DSLR video news, Lighting | Permalink | Comments (0)

Johnnie Behiri uses 7D and Twixtor to shoot Kata bags promo

Kata’s VDSLR bags highlight review from Johnnie Behiri on Vimeo.

I’ve been working closely with Kata for many years, testing their bags and filming testimonials by other professionals who use them too. So I was happy when the request came to make a short video highlighting their latest VDSLR bags vintage range.

There is no perfect bag and every assignment may require a different carrying solution. That’s the reason I’ve decided to explore different options, from a full load of equipment to a camera-only bag solution.

I felt the video deserved a bit of an extra footage to make it a bit more entertaining and I was lucky enough to meet grand master Chen Shi Hong and his Viennese Kung-Fu class. Their beautiful movements were captured with a Canon 7D in 720/50p and I later manipulated the footage in Twixtor Pro within Adobe Premiere to achieve “super slow motion” effect. I kept the shutter at 1600 to avoid blurring images.

The second Canon 7D used for capturing my piece to camera was operated by the talented Stefan Nutz.

Equipment used:
Tripod: Sachtler DV 8 SB
Rig: Vocas
EVF: Cineroid
Lenses:
Canon 17-55mm f2.8
Tokina 11-16mm f2.8
Samyang 8mm f3.5
Samyang 85mm f1.4

Audio:
Tascam DR-100
Sennheiser EW100 G2
Sanken COS 11D wireless microphone

Johnnie Behiri is a BBC freelance cameraman operating from Vienna, Austria.
When not working for the BBC, Johnnie films documentaries, commercials, music videos, and testimonial/marketing videos for other broadcasters and clients.

Posted on April 4th, 2011 by Johnnie | Category: Camera bags | Permalink | Comments (0)

New Kata DSLR bags and a novel Manfrotto Photo-Video tripod head

Whilst at the Canon Pro Solutions show in London a few weeks back I got a chance to look at a few new products. Apologies for not posting these until now but I’ve been rather busy lately.

Kata were showing off some new bags aimed at HDDSLR shooters who need to travel light. First up is the Source-261PL bag which is designed to take a camera on a rig fitted in it’s main compartment with several lenses in cleverly designed side pockets. Next they have two new bags in the FlyBy range which are super lightweight gear trunks that can fit a laptop and be used on rollers.

Kata unveils new lightweight DSLR bags for video shooters from Dan Chung on Vimeo.

Manfrotto also had an interesting new tripod head on show aimed at convergence shooter doing stills and video together. It functions like a regular pan and tilt video fluid head until at the flick of a switch it goes into photo mode where you can put the camera upright. I can see this appealing to a lot of photographers who are starting to shoot video.

Manfrotto Photo/Video tripod head on show from Dan Chung on Vimeo.

Both of these quick videos were shot by dslrnewsshooter.com contributor Sam Morgan Moore. Many thanks to him.

Posted on December 9th, 2010 by Dan Chung | Category: Camera bags, DSLR video news, Tripods and monopods | Permalink | Comments (2)

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