The document discusses potential risks for filming a music video in a small room and proposes mitigation strategies. It identifies the size of the room as a risk for injury if band members are not careful during filming. It suggests filming action shots one actor at a time to avoid collisions. It also notes that low light conditions could make tripod legs hard to see, risking actors tripping, and proposes adding reflective tape to increase visibility. Additionally, it acknowledges that cables on the ruged floor pose a tripping hazard, and advises placing the rug over the cables to reduce that risk.
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The document discusses potential risks for filming a music video in a small room and proposes mitigation strategies. It identifies the size of the room as a risk for injury if band members are not careful during filming. It suggests filming action shots one actor at a time to avoid collisions. It also notes that low light conditions could make tripod legs hard to see, risking actors tripping, and proposes adding reflective tape to increase visibility. Additionally, it acknowledges that cables on the ruged floor pose a tripping hazard, and advises placing the rug over the cables to reduce that risk.
The document discusses potential risks for filming a music video in a small room and proposes mitigation strategies. It identifies the size of the room as a risk for injury if band members are not careful during filming. It suggests filming action shots one actor at a time to avoid collisions. It also notes that low light conditions could make tripod legs hard to see, risking actors tripping, and proposes adding reflective tape to increase visibility. Additionally, it acknowledges that cables on the ruged floor pose a tripping hazard, and advises placing the rug over the cables to reduce that risk.
Copyright:
Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online from Scribd
The document discusses potential risks for filming a music video in a small room and proposes mitigation strategies. It identifies the size of the room as a risk for injury if band members are not careful during filming. It suggests filming action shots one actor at a time to avoid collisions. It also notes that low light conditions could make tripod legs hard to see, risking actors tripping, and proposes adding reflective tape to increase visibility. Additionally, it acknowledges that cables on the ruged floor pose a tripping hazard, and advises placing the rug over the cables to reduce that risk.
Copyright:
Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online from Scribd
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Risk Assessment
Object/Potential Risk – Size Of Room;
The size of the room that most of my music video will be filmed in is quite small, so having a band in there could result in injury if people aren’t careful. A way of avoiding injury would be to film action one actor at a time. By action shots I mean elaborate drum fills and movement. If each actor takes it in turns to act these shots, then there is no risk of actors hitting each other.
Object/Potential Risk – Tripod Legs;
The legs on the camera tripod are difficult to see in low light conditions, which could be a problem for the actors which are doing a lot of movement. A way of reducing the amount of risk here is to put some reflective tape around the legs of the tripod, to increase their visibility.
Object/Potential Risk – Cables;
The room that most of my recording will take part in has a big rug on the floor. A way that I could avoid the risk of tripping over cables is to place the rug over them.