We spent about 6 days filming this video (viewed best in full screen) that was part of our Easter Production at New Life Church.
For this video, we added a voice over where the main actor was performing a monologue live. The song, by Phil Wickham, was performed live with a click track and this video playing in the background. You can download the video by visiting our Vimeo Page.
Here’s a few more details on the production:
Director | Neil Greathouse
Camera | Nathan Pruzaniec, Zach Fonville, Daniel Sample
Production | Angie Brown, Jenna Wilson, Amber Hoyt, Lindsey Cornelson, Hannah Reeves
Equipment
Cameras | Canon 7D and Canon 5D
Lenses | 70-200mm f2.8is, 15mm fisheye, 17-40mm, 85mm f1.8, 24-70mm f2.8
Editing | Final Cut Pro, Adobe Premiere
Compositing | After Effects
Color Grading | Magic Bullet Looks
Here are a few ideas that we have done over the past couple of years.
Hope it gets ideas going for others.
1) Opener: True Love by Phil Wickham… We did this song to open our Easter Services with an accompanying video and production that moved from black and white into a surge of color (through lights and media)
We’re so excited… this year we’re taking a bunch of rock songs (U2, Coldplay, Lifehouse, Shinedown, OneRepublic… and more) and created a rock opera out of them, telling the story of the Prodigal Son, which will quickly segue into how Jesus’ death and resurrection gave us the way home.
We have a teaser promotional page up now (more to be added later):
We’re going to do two worship songs up front, an intro/offering by the senior pastor, the rock opera, the message and then a closing worship song.
Something else that’s important… we design our Easter services for visitors, so sometimes the more mature believers mourn a more traditional celebration service. This year, we’re making Palm Sunday a big event as well, sort of celebrating the victory of Easter a week early. It’s going to be a great 1-2 punch!
God has wired me to dream big when it comes to brainstorming ministry events. When it gets to the point where the response from fellow brainstormers is usually “but how could we ever pull that off,” I know we’re right where he wants us to be.
Case in point, the pre-Easter ministry event we held this past weekend at all of The Chapel campuses, Kids Day. This was the second annual Kids Day, but we were looking for a bigger draw than last year — the remarkable factor.
“Gibby” from iCarly?
For the past year or so my wife and I, and our two year old, have been watching Nickelodeon’s iCarly. About eight months ago, just by happenstance, I found out Noah Munck (Gibby) is a professing Christian. God immediately laid it on my heart we needed to bring that guy to Chicago for Kids Day.
The Ask
After a little more digging I found out Noah’s dad, Greg, is the Executive Pastor at Crossline Church in Laguna Hills, CA. I got in touch with Greg, and he was very gracious we wanted Noah to help with a Kingdom event. (Found out later this was Noah’s first big public meet and greet, etc. It’s really cool that it got to be for ministry!)
Greg had Noah’s agent get in touch with me, and we worked out all of the details and sealed the deal.
Testimony
Someone at each campus location held a 15 minute Q and A session with Noah. The questions were fun and eventually funneled down to a chance for him to share his testimony and how being a Christian influences his work.
We got great feedback from this. One mother said, “My kids and so many of their friends were really inspired by ‘Gibby’s’ story.”
Meet and Greet
After each Q and A, Noah signed autographs (on glossies we had printed with his website and our church logo and website) and had photos made with kids and adults alike.
Indoor Carnival
Noah’s appearance was just one part of Kids Day. Another big draw was the free indoor carnival. Each campus had several inflatables in the worship area, games, reptile petting, cotton candy, and popcorn. Kids were given passports to have stamped at each activity station. The first 100 to fill up their card got a free t-shirt.
Promotion
Here are the various ways we got the word out about Kids Day.
Word-of-mouth
Corporate sponsors hung posters and gave away flyers.
Websites made for Kids Day at each campus: Example: http://www.libertyvillekidsday.com. They include one-click options for sharing on Facebook and Twitter, and email a friend.
Facebook ads for each Kids Day website.
We got into most of the school districts. This meant we were able to put a rave card in every child’s hand. Some schools only have a “digital backpack,” so our event was listed on their website. (We were denied access to a few also.)
Town websites posted Kids Day on their community calendars.
Newspaper event listings in print and online.
We got in touch with all of the local mommy blogs and mommy groups (some through meetup.com).
It was a great day all around. Noah is a cool kid with a huge heart for ministry. His parents were awesome too.
Across all five campuses, and void of “pastor math,” here are some key numbers from Kids Day. Not bad considering it snowed more than two inches the morning of.
4,000 people in attendance including children, students, and adults.
Over 2,000 attenders who weren’t Chapel regulars.
Over 2,000 clicks from Facebook ads.
Noah signed approx. 1,500 autographs.
Extra Goodness
Noah taped the audiences for the Kids Choice Awards while he was here — See it on YouTube.
Sample Poster from our Libertyville Campus. (The look was created by Lauren Murrell, Eric’s very talented wife!)
The Easter season at The CORE starts with Lent. We are Lutherans and like any good ones, we like guilt. I say that only half jokingly some days. Regardless, we do remember the season of Lent.
That means we have Wednesday evening services that focus on the Passion of Christ as well as the Sunday services.
On Wednesdays this year we are visiting “The Lenten Museum.” Each week we uncover a new artifact which tells another small piece of the Story of Christ’s suffering and death. This series will culminate on Easter Sunday. For us, it provides a fresh approach to the Story that we hear every year. Last year, we looked at the people you meet on the way to the cross which was also a fresh approach. We feel it is important to review, remember, and learn from the Passion Story every year, but also recognize that in order to do so we may have to look at it through a new lens. To drive home the museum idea we have a “museum” of sorts set up at each of our campuses. Each week we add the new artifact. We also have “tickets” that people receive after each Wednesday service. On one side is a ticket looking image. The other side is a piece of an image, sort of like a puzzle. The end result is a beautiful resurrection themed image which reminds us of the end result of the whole Easter season – hope. We always look for tangible ways to put the message from the service in people’s hands, and this is one way we can do that.
Our Sunday series during this season is “Bloodlines.” We are looking at the bloodlines that flow to the cross (genealogy, history, prophecy, etc) and the blood lines that flow from the cross to us. It is always good to go back and look at the Story from beginning to end. For the people we serve it provides a greater appreciation for what God has done and continues to do for us. Easter Sunday itself is to some degree a typical Sunday. Easter and Christmas for us are not extra special outreach events. Outreach for us is a way of life, it’s built into the rhythm of our organization and is something we pray God injects into the DNA of our people. We are still discussing the exact details of our Easter Sunday service, but our Christmas Eve service this year was not over the top, it was the exact opposite. We went totally acoustic and toned everything down. For us, that was powerful. Not sure what that means for Easter Sunday yet.
After spending 25 years at Willow, doing Easter planning with a large programming staff, planning Easter always feels a little overwhelming.
Our little church of 300 has grown to almost 2000 in the past 5 years, but our programming staff is still just me and 2 part time people. So we do it all with volunteers, and on that level I have the best people anywhere!
We began meeting back in December to decide on the theme for this service. Drawing on learnings from a conference we attended, we are not doing a ’stand-alone’ Easter service this year, but using Easter Sunday to begin a new series instead. We are using Tim Keller’s book, “The Prodigal God – Finding Your Place at the Table,” as the basis for a 6 week series and all-church life-group study that will begin on Easter Sunday. It is a fantastic, 6 week study of the parable of the prodigal son.
Since our message is not specifically Easter oriented, when our volunteer brainstorming team began meeting to plan the programming, we wanted to make the 1st half of the service explode with the hope and joy of Easter. Since we don’t have a video or dance department, but since we have great musicians here, we decided to lean into what we do best; worship and music.
Due to our smaller size, one trick we have learned over the past couple of years is to lean into elements that others have created and make them our own. Last year we took the “He Has Risen” video that Willow Creek had created (towardwonder.com)and stripped the sound track from it so we could do it live. We created a sound track with a click to it so the band and vocals could accompany it live. Then we put 3 drummers with large bass drums across the front of the stage, back lit them, and added live vocals, etc. It was a powerful opener and created an awesome opening to our service, but it didn’t require us to have a video department to create it.
This year we are taking that same idea one step farther. One of the volunteers on our team brought a video of the opener that Hillsong used for their worship conference this past summer. (youtube, Hillsong
2009 opening, the 10 minute version) It is a 10 minute piece that combines video and photographs on the screen with a dozen snare drummers across the stage and full band. Eventually it goes into the song “With Everything,” a song our church LOVES. So we are re-creating that idea. We are creating our own video/photo piece that starts with words similar to what they used: Christ died. One sacrifice for all.
Etc. These words and photos show during the opening instrumental run which we will play live, with 4 snare drummers creatively lit across our stage. As the song, “With Everything” begins, the choir enters and the words on the screen shift to the Easter theme. “Christ died. One sacrifice for all. They laid him in the tomb. He is not here, He has risen!!!” As the song ends, our drama readers will read the Easter story from Luke 24 while the synth/drums/guitars rumble on the last chord.
From there the lights come up full and we are going into some new songs we’ve been using here that have the Easter theme woven into
them: Rise and Sing (Fee), Let God Arise (Tomlin), Shout Joyfully (BJ Putnam). Between the opening Hillsong piece (snare drums, video, Easter story) and the worship run, we’re hoping for a great celebration of Easter and what Christ has done, then turning it over to our pastor who will take us into the first message of this new series.
This is definitely taking the extra effort and time we are all committed to giving on this crucial day of the year for every church, but it also feels doable for a staff of 1 and a bunch of volunteers. I know that many of us who are reading pages like this are guys like me these days that need creative elements that can be done without a large church staff or budget. Hopefully this will give you some new ideas on how to do that!
In 2009 I wrote a series of posts on the “10 Commandments of a Weekend Experience”. As we draw near to Easter Weekend I thought that we could revisit these to make sure we are ready for guests…
@bartondamer is a household name in Graphics and motion art. I have had the pleasure to work with Barton on a couple of occassion as well as using alot of his work in his previous gig at RT Creative. In March 2010 Barton made the leap into full-time freelance work. You should use him (so says @shawnwood). Here is some #planningeaster advice from my friend Barton.
I really like the idea of taking your audience through the entire
Easter experience – Good Friday through resurrection. After all, the
celebration will mean a lot more if you’ve reflected on the sacrifice.
Not everyone is going to have a Good Friday service so here’s my
suggestion. Start out the worship service in a darker more
contemplative mood (choosing songs to match that mood). Focus on the
blood of Christ and his sacrifice. Here are the visuals I suggest for
that portion of the service: Crimson Stains 1 Crimson Stains 2
Then, transition your service from dark and contemplative into
celebration using the click track visuals to the worship song, Jesus
Paid It All. The song transitions into an amazing moment of
celebration at the end: Jesus Paid it all
At this point, your service is brighter and more vibrant. Use songs
that are more celebratory and here are some more visuals to help
communicate the mood: Back Packs Easter
All this media will help you take your audience on a journey to the
cross and through the resurrection. The look of everything matches as
well so it will feel as if you have an enormous media team working for
you.
To top off the service. Celebrate with That’s My King Remix: That’s My King
@dcschwarz and @nickjones created Prolifik Films to provide visual storytelling for ministries, churches, and non-profit organizations who are serious about having impact and creating change. A noteworthy Prolifik Films project was the documentary “Only Love” featuring U2 frontman Bono which aired at the Willow Creek Leadership Summit last year. Dave lives in Saint Charles, IL with Robin, Brandon and Kaylee.
We’re all familiar with the tired phrase “the cobbler’s children have no shoes”. In fact, in some circles it’s so overused that it’s been rendered meaningless. But if we peel back the cliché, we typically conclude that the cobbler spends so much time at the shop earning a living that his family isn’t a priority. And this is why it gets repeated over and over by designers, printers, marketers and a host of other service providers who can’t make the time to help themselves .
But the possibility that what the cobbler does at work is the last thing he wants to do for his family is troublesome, too. And sadly, we all hear this sort of thing all the time. What’s the creative equivalent of this phrase?
“The musician’s baby has no songs written about her?”
“The photographer’s family has no portraits?”
“The designer’s house is all white—just as the builder left it.”
If that’s ever true—especially amongst creatives in the kingdom—then something is broken. In fact, I believe that the demands of the busy Easter season are all the more reason to blur the lines between those things that you love . . . from friends & family to the artistic or technical passions that you’ve been entrusted with.
This isn’t about taking your work home. This is about combining the things that you love to fuel, to inspire, and to challenge yourself creatively.
Nick and I were testing some equipment a while back and shot this one-minute sample of my family:
Now, I love that video for what it is. But practically speaking, I’ve found myself playing it in a handful of settings to illustrate one thing or the other. One potential client was expressing frustration about a casting agency & how their spots never came across as authentic, but after seeing the bowing spec, their perspective changed forever. They said that they’d trade the film crews, grip trucks, location fees and catering tables for something that felt that real. It led to some great conversations and a complete re-invention of their expectations—all from a simple little film that we put together just to test some new equipment & have some fun.
At a recent brainstorming meeting we were having trouble pulling all of the resources together to tell a handful of stories from start-to-finish. So, to explore the idea of combining simple visuals with live narration (or teaching) I played this one-minute video that I put together after a recent family trip to Washington DC:
As the video was playing, I talked about how a volunteer had chosen to spend some extra time with my seven year-old daughter. He honored us by telling her the story of the one female solider killed in action in Vietnam. He took Kaylee to a spot on the wall where he helped her make a rubbing of the soldier’s name—Sharon Lane. As we were getting ready to leave, this war-hardened volunteer veteran turned to us & with red, teary eyes, he said “Thank you. You guys just made my day.” I was speechless. A draftee, thrust into an unpopular, loosing war, and now volunteering nearly all his time in his last chapter of life—and we made his day. It wrecked me.
And after showing these simple visuals, and choking my way through the story, it clicked with the team. The series of illustrations didn’t need to resolve themselves on film. And our plans started going in a whole new direction.
I think that if we truly love what we do, and we live with enough margin to practice our skills and passion outside of our livelihood, that it’ll fuel and inspire us creatively.
Incidentally, I’ve also got a number of personal projects that failed—shots that didn’t work, moments that weren’t captured as I would have liked. And I learned from every single one of those, too.
The ability to tell stories, create moments, and explain, inspire or illustrate through drama and art . . . these are precious, noble gifts & passions. Some of us (myself included) need to be reminded that this aspect of being created in the image of God is way too important to use just to earn a salary. It’s not just what we do. It’s a big part of who we are.
I keep trying to do this whole planning easter thing – and it’s getting interrupted by the actual easter. :)
We’re doing a major production for Easter called “The Chase”. It’s all based on what we feel is most needed today in people’s lives – and that’s a message that they can apply today. The tag line of “We’re all chasing something. God never stops pursuing us.” The Chase is a story of a man (through live acting, music, video) who is struggling with regrets and an overall feeling of unrest. It’s not cliche – but very practical. The whole thing opens on video and you see him running – but you don’t know if it’s from something or toward something. Which is where we’re all at. We’re going to show his life of good moments, bad ones, critical decisions, etc. and then go into a bunch of live music which flows into the worship sets.
If I’ve got one thing to add to the planning Easter – it would be this: We’re advertising on Facebook instead of our normal direct mailers. They’re the worst return on investment and you have no way of measuring their effectiveness. The return is less than 1% and that’s only if you get someone to act on a direct request – coupon for coffee, free CD, etc. So we’re going with Facebook – targeting people outside the church – and the beauty is – it’s about 1/3 of the cost of direct mailers. We get instant feedback on what people are interested, track details and stats that aren’t available any other way. It was a major shift in the thinking of some of our Exec pastors – because in their mind – “we built this church on mailers” but that was 9 years ago – and things have changed drastically in the last 9 months! So it’s a “gamble” but it’s going to pay off.