kazunori_279: In the past, when I was speaking at a big event, I would practice many times to make sure I could speak smoothly. I can take pictures and edit them myself, so I can cover up my lack of practice by patching things together.
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kazunori_279: Also, as I’m doing right now, after I’ve finished filming and edited the video, I take a quick look at it and then take additional shots where I want a little more explanation. I’m like a movie. It’s like a movie.
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kazunori_279: I always listen to podcasts at 1.5 - 2.0x speed, which makes me talk too fast.
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dancerj: if you’re worried about the angle of the material, or something like that, and you have to take it over and over again, you might get really good at it in the meantime.
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kazunori_279: yes, it’s like rework = practice :)
lestrrat: I don’t leave it up to the recording, but rather let the staff watch me as I speak. I’m not leaving that part to the recording, but I’m trying to watch the staff as they are speaking. I ask the staff to explain what is missing in the content, and the slides are created (or re-created) by the production team.
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kazunori_279: You can fix the slides. If there is a staff, I prepare to some extent so as not to cause trouble, but if I record and edit alone, I end up re-shooting like Kubrick on the spot :) I’m not a perfectionist, I’m just out of practice.
nishio: I recently heard this and it was an eye-opener for me, but I think that if you are a remote speaker flesh and blood, you don’t have to be there to speak, so you don’t have to speak in real-time if you are not playing catch-up. I’ve recently heard this and it made me realize that in the case of remote speakers, you don’t have to be there flesh and blood to speak, so you don’t have to play catch-up, and if you do, it’s better to film it beforehand and edit out the mistakes so you can respond to questions in real time via chat. twitter.com/kazunori_279/s…
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nishio: When I was asked to give a lecture, I had been thinking that I would prepare materials in advance and speak on the day of the lecture, but after hearing this story, I was shocked to think that my intention to speak on the day of the lecture was just an old man’s move, drawing on past practices without any basis. But when I heard this story, I was shocked to realize that my intention to speak on the day of the event was just a move of an old man who is dragging the customs of the past without any basis.
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nishio: There are lectures where there is interaction with the audience and there are one-way lectures where there is no interaction with the audience, and if you want the former, of course you need to have a mechanism to facilitate feedback from the audience. If you want the former, you need to have a mechanism to facilitate feedback from the audience, and if you want the latter, you can’t help but be compared to a YouTube video and told to “play it back at double speed, unedited and unsubtitled, sub-channel quality.
hiro: I think it depends on what kind of place the event organizer wants to create. Each event has its own characteristics. I think it is better to talk about it live, and I think that hybrids will increase in the future.
nagise: you’re right. In a live show, there is interaction, but if you do it remotely, you can’t really see the audience’s reaction. On the other hand, if it’s a live show, if you don’t focus on interaction, what’s the point of doing it live? That’s what I was talking about twitter.com/nishio/status/…
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