Episode 146 - Behind the Scenes with Boo-Bury! - podcast episode cover

Episode 146 - Behind the Scenes with Boo-Bury!

Jul 14, 2023Ep. 146
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David

Hello, I and welcome

Leila

to Fun Fact Friday with me and him

David

and, and also Boo-Burry Boo-Bury: Oh, hello there. Hello, our third guests ever. Oh, this is Fun Fact Friday weekly podcast for discuss facts around a different topic each week. You can send us correspondents at mail at Fun Fact friday.com

Leila

He has more things on a soundboard than us and I'm jealous. Boo-Bury: I have 1000s of ISOs 1000s upon 1000s

David

If we set up a soundboard on this tablet right here, you could do that. Boo-Bury: Alright, actually, well, if you have a couple of virtual cables, you might be able to try the resonance program out R E S A N A, N C E. I like it. It's pretty

responsive. You can build multiple boards which is you know all you could really ask for me All right, I'll send it to you right now actually soundboard program well, let's let's not get into the weeds with sound we do soundboard programs while we're on the air. Boo-Bury: But that's literally like my favorite thing ever. I can nerd out. I have I have such a deep, thorough knowledge of trying soundboard after soundboard. After soundboard.

Leila

Is that all you do? Some people have a picture of their family in their wallet. Boo-Bury: Yes, how do you know?

David

It's? So this week's episode is going to be about like, like, what what blueberry does? Boo-Bury: What do you do? What do I do? That's an most interesting question. Because I'm not even sure half the time Oh, well, I guess it's not it's more so why do I do this? Since 2010, I have made my primary source of income through working entertainment. That includes theatre or theatrical shows, working at theme parks doing setup for their holiday seasons.

So like Halloween decorations, lighting, lots and lots and lots and lots and lots and lots and lots of Christmas strands hung up in the theme park. I've been on tour for 2012 all the way up until 2029 different shows I spent a couple of seasons working on and off again with a rental company here in the Twin Cities that would gear a lot of lighting packages to tours and

festivals and stuff as it came through. I've spent a decent amount of time trying to work union calls here in town, it's not something I am as available to do, just because it's kind of like they have a lot of the time. Right. And now I work as a tech director at high school. Awesome. So you had sent me some because we talked about hexagons last week, and you sent me some really cool pictures of some behind the scenes stuff with some hexagons, and you've

worked in the in theater. Theater, we're all here to and we wanted to ask you about some some lighting and stuff. Because I'm currently trying to light the new studio because I'm going to do video and I just think it's cool and wondering when my video cameras activated right now. We can what do you what are you doing? Boo-Bury: You didn't know there's a video feed now. When turn this whole episode into a gift, just just me this this feed though

it's just my face though, is it like the cameras older? I haven't set it up yet. It's just kind of like hanging from the ceiling. Like Sandia. I'm messing with lighting in the new studio trying to get a certain look. And so I'm reading all about lighting scenes and lighting. Mainly like a YouTube video type lighting. And all of the the lighting stuff fascinates me because of how complicated it is when you think it's just like, Oh, hey, oh, let's shoot a pink light over

there. So it's a little pink. And then we'll just put the spotlight on the person in the middle. But is it any more complicated than that? Or? Boo-Bury: I can make it. I can make it even more simpler if you like that. fired at me. Boo-Bury: Lady lady pluggy pluggy

Leila

Oh real. That's all you need to know. Yes. Boo-Bury: That's not what I meant, but it works. Yeah, I mean, it really it's like, what it comes down to, when when you're working with lighting is you you want to define shape and something that looks really flat. So if you did, you just have a dark stage and a black backdrop back curtain, you put an actor out there, well, you're not going to be able to see them because there's no light. Okay, so we're going to put on some

face light. So the face lights come in from the catwalks up above in the house as one of 100 million other different examples. But when you when you bring that when you when you shine the light on him from the front there, it it still makes them look kind of flat, because there's nothing actually separating their back from that curtain that's upstage of them.

So you want to maybe add some top light to come in and kind of define where their shoulders are, right, because you're not seeing the top of their shoulders, you're seeing the front of their body. So it's really just, it comes down to playing with both the highlights and the lowlights, the highlights and shadows. And there's really only there's a really good if somewhere video, which I'll see if I can find it

while we hang out here. But basically, it just shows what it looks like to take a camera and shine it from every position around them like a like a clock set up almost right. And, you know, you can you can shine a light straight on to somebody's face, but there's no good there's no definition. Exactly. When you come in with a 45 from either side. Well, now you've created more definition, you've got those the shadows of their face and the contours and all that you can start taking steps

further by adding a cool and a warm color. Which I mean that's you can do a hot or hot you can do a cold and cold, it really doesn't matter. Just you know, I mean, there's even some lighting designers the name of her escapes me but she's won several Tony's over the years who uses no color in her show no gels. It's all it's all just the intensity of the lamps. And I And

David

what's a gel, I'm yeah, we're an educational show. Oh, for sure the term that a lot of people may know. Boo-Bury: So a gel is just a clear piece of it's almost like cellophane but it's a lot thicker, because you don't want it to melt while it's in front of the light. But essentially, you just pop this piece of colored cellophane in front of a light. And when the light hits it, it'll now shoot out that

color. So you can put a red jelly, get red, blue, get a blue, the LED little LED panels that I bought came with like four or five different color gels to put in front of them. And I've been playing with those, like even combining them, you know, combined the blue and yellow and make green and I've been messing around with them for the last week, just trying a bunch of different different setups. And I think I'm coming down to what I what I wanted to look like. And it's pretty cool.

But before we go any further, I would just like to mention that this is a value for value podcast. If you boost this podcast and a podcasting 2.0 app, blueberry will receive a split. And that's one of the cool things about podcasting. 2.0 value for value is that if you're listening in a value enabled app, every guest on the show every person involved in the show will get a split, which is cool. It lets me pay people for coming on the show. Not you'd need that. I'm sure you

would come on without pay. But Boo-Bury: if you did it for the exposure, right. Kyle Kyle gets a little split for his little part at the end or a little altro and Dred Scott gets a split for doing the chapters Thank you drab and I believe I've got a couple other splits in there like fountain that it's all you know, behind the scenes stuff with with reporting and stuff.

So there's a lot of neat stuff going on in the splits. And we did get we got a boost from someone new cousin veto from pod verse boosted 10,301 SATs and says Hey, y'all been loving the show? Can't wait for the Fun Fact Friday we said fff can't wait for fff about wall servido Thank you servido for that 10,301 SATs. And that was in reference to last week we talked about how we came up with the topic of hexagons. And it's because I was looking around the room

Leila

I forgot what the joke was. So it was kind of like we really hope you remember

David

talking about oh, Wow, that's a neat GIF. We'll have to make sure we get that into the, into the chapters. Boo-Bury: So yeah, me Kara was actually just sent that over to me. It's the GIF of the white spinning around somebody's face and just how it morphs them essentially, right completely change the shape of their face. Like I said, I've been playing with lights this week, and I've got my primary or what's principle, I got a principal light, which

is my main light. And then I've got my and that's, that's it. It's about a 45 degree angle, almost maybe, I don't know, 30 from directly in front, and it's like the two o'clock position maybe, which we'll get started before. Anyway. And then I've got this other secondary light that's bouncing off the wall. Which of the walls in here are white right now? It's bouncing off the wall in this little reflective circle that I have that kind of fill fill light, that's what it's called. So I've

got that. And then I've got some stuff in the back, like you were saying earlier. That crown light, I think is what this called maybe, key light key light. Yeah. And it hits the back of me and defines me away from the background. Boo-Bury: Yeah, it really just comes down to the separation space, right? You want to you can definitely tell where I am versus the background.

Boo-Bury: Right. So you don't you don't want to get kind of lost sucked up into that background, you want to make sure that your form is clearly defined. Right, right. And if I had a really, really good camera, the camera can do a lot of that for you with you know, the focus field and whatnot, but I've got a little cheapo camera, so So yeah, that was that was our boosts. That was a boost we got for last week show. And oh, just got another one. From

blueberry. That good looking guy says https colon slash slash. There's a link to a folder. And it says I said I'd boost a hexagon pic in and it's 17,776 SATs from blueberry. Yeah, and what app is that is boost called CLI. Boo-Bury: Yes, CLI. We want to see best ways of just spending all of my sets. Yeah, yeah, all of my wallets are empty right now. I've got to actually pull them off the node to to start sending them around again.

Boo-Bury: C dubs has turned me into a monster I've got a whole of my node and its boost CLI shaped just just send a boost all those good shows out there on more and more shows are getting on onto that Boo-Bury: 16,000 by the last count Wow. Wow. So but yeah, that's that's the end of our value. Oh, no, it is not the end of the value segment those two pay pals that Pay Pal messed up somehow came through. So we got our I'm

doing stalling language because outlooks not open. I know we got the monthly $19.12 from Dred Scott 1912 being the year Oreo was invented. I love the numbers. And then I believe the other one was our $10 monthly donation from Steven Grimes. So thank you all very much the monthlies are fantastic because they keep keep the server's running. Keep the live stream up even though we don't stream every single week. That's Oh,

there we go. Hold on. I'm still receiving Pay Pal. I haven't opened outlook on this computer in a little while apparently because I'm getting a lot of emails. Okay, yeah, there we go. So yep, Thank you, Steven Grimes. And of course, thank you dribs Scott, our chapter architect. And, yeah, so that wraps up the value segment. If you want to help us out, you can visit us at Fun Fact. friday.com. Click the donation link or boost us in your favorite new podcast app from

new podcast apps.com. Now back to the facts about lights and set design and other whatever we talk about while we're here. So yeah, go ahead.

Leila

What's your favorite show that you have done? Boo-Bury: As far well. I think the one that I was most invested in and probably the most surprised that it actually came together was a show that a friend of mine had wrote in college and we submitted it as a student production. And I just I have a lot of it It's very it's a very surreal feeling to realize that what you know, there's people that just paid a ticket to come see a show that we very messily cobbled

together, but we still got it done. And there was tears involved. There was fights.

David

Oh, yeah, that's awesome. Any creative pursuits gonna have that stuff? Boo-Bury: But it was a cool show. It's, you know, it was kind of like a dark Americana sort of gritty southern tale. But that was, that was a really cool experience. And then we actually did kind of a, quote unquote, soft remount at a theater downtown and like, kind of tweaked some of the stuff and yeah, it was, it was a good time. It's really neat when you when you put something together,

and like people actually, like, enjoy it. Like they they want to want to partake in it. Like this show. I Boo-Bury: didn't say that they enjoy well. They, but they they came to it. They were intrigued enough to come to it. And they didn't get up and leave, right. Or did they? Boo-Bury: I'll never tell, right? Well, I did a, I did a live show of me despod at a local pub. And it was I just read three Edgar Allan Poe

stories. And I took all my computer, my podcast gear, all that kind of stuff, recording equipment up to this bar, and read some stories I had, like, 30 people show up. And now part of it was probably because it wasn't paid. You know, it wasn't a pay thing. I just did it. But it was really neat. That, you know, I just did this thing that I rehearsed and put together and had sound effects and all this stuff. It was really neat. And then I think about like this show, what was Lipsy Leila? I

didn't know it was like, turn off your Microsoft sounds. Hey, yeah, but we, we look at like, I'm not a big stats person on how many downloads we get or things like that. But I did turn on the OP three statistics for the show, just to play with that

whole system. And just like looking at how many downloads we get a week, and I'm just like, wow, we've got that many people take time out of their week, to listen to us goof off and read facts about things we found on the internet, you know, 30 minutes before we start so like, you think about your number of listeners, if they were all sitting in a room listening, how overwhelming it would be. Boo-Bury: It might be a little on the uncomfortable side.

Right? It would be it'd be amazing. Like you're like, wow, there's this many people interested in the thing that we're making. And it's just I don't know, it feels good to be to be making something and people are actually out here enjoying it. Or at least or at least hate listening, you know? Waiting for us to mess up so they can cancel us. But yeah, when you sent those pictures, you had sent us some pictures that you said were from Alice in Wonderland that were like set design.

Leila

I really liked those. Boo-Bury: Thank you. That was a that was a show that we did here at the School this past? April. Yes, April. It was a this one was probably the most student driven design. In my what six shows that I've done here now. So about two years old, we sat down and we kind of came up with the just the shape of the set, like oh, you know, like some form of staircases and like something to cap said staircases would be really cool and our

sort of Maine carburetor took the concept and ran with it. And what you're looking at is a 16 foot curved bridge that we built from the ground up on top of two platforms that sit at 10 feet. So when you get to the middle of that curve of the bridge, you're standing 13 feet up in the air. Oh, wow.

David

That's an eight for a school production. That's really Yeah. Boo-Bury: Yeah, you can see the there's a picture towards the beginning of the Alice folder, I got the jig laid out on the floor, and we ended up building a giant. I mean, it was like two, eight foot two by fours that we screwed together to make this almost like a compass point when we just traced it back and forth on the two sheets of plywood to get that huge curved

shape. Right and just put the blocks in there so that we would have something that clamp everything as we are gluing them into place. That's cool. When we did we the sets that we had to do when I was in high school theater, like there was nothing that had to be built. We just had to bring things in from home like that is it You want to have a you know, coat rack, you know,

Leila

we'd have a little basket of just stuff that we'd have to pack into a little suitcase to bring it to other schools.

David

Yeah, we I liked the I always liked the, the local theatre where like, you can tell that like the the whole set was built by the same people who are doing the acting. Like, there's 12 people involved total. But yeah, we're, we're big fans of the whole artsy crafts pneus of it that, you know, people have to figure stuff out and people are wearing like, you know, their, their funeral suit, and they're supposed to be like the mayor, you know, wearing their one suit that they own up there.

But yeah, so you said that you had worked on cats? At some point. Boo-Bury: That was the last tour that I was on. That would have ended March 2020. So what ended in March of 2020? Boo-Bury: You know, there was this thing going around it just everybody got super into it. It kind of detracted from what was going on at the time.

Leila

I must have missed it. Yeah.

David

Wow. How's it go? Look it up?

Leila

Right on birthday, too.

David

Yeah. Oh, man. That stupid bug. Like the day before my birthday? Yeah, they lock everything. Yeah, yeah, she had a whole party planned. And they were like, man, no, no party for you. And it was her 10th birthday too. So I really, you know, kind of ruined her. You only gain a place in your, your birthday, like three times. You know, when your first birthday. You get that one at one place. And then when you turn 10 You get that 10s place. And then you gotta wait till you're 100

Before you get that extra digit. So now she's got to wait till she's 100.

Leila

Before she could just say that. I'm not

David

like I'm nine.

Leila

No 300 perpetual.

David

Yeah.

Unknown

I am as old as time itself.

David

I knew I knew a kid in school that was born on February 29. Leap, leap year, leapfrog Leap Day, whatever you call it. But yeah, so he always had to celebrate on the 28th to the first unless he wanted to be 10 when he was 40.

Leila

The concept of leap years. Boo-Bury: But this Yeah, the cats tour. It was my first foray as the head electrician. I was the third guy that was also called in which is not a good sign. If the show had only been out for eight months. That means that they'd went through the first crew of two people and then they went through the second crew of two people so we were called in to be the third replacements for this show that hadn't even been out for a year

and it was a it was a it was a trip. Let me just tell you that trying to be as a PC as possible about it was a PG about it. Sorry, it was it was it was a fun time. That's what it was. It was great. It was grand, grand grand.

David

It was I had fun adventure Boo-Bury: of my life. This is a actually I'll drop a link to this. This is so this is kind of what I was in charge with you to look at this one here and the hashtag Fun Fact Friday at IRC dot zero node. These are our power distros for powering up all of the trusses actually do you still have that? The PDFs that I've sent over last night? I will have to open up discord to get to them. But in the meantime, we just got a live boost from Buli steed on

fountain technical hiccups go podcasting. Dane Bucha it the technical hiccup. We were going live tonight. And the technical hiccup was this guy. The output on my broadcasting software was set to on the input the mic setting was set to a speaker instead of a microphone. So it couldn't it couldn't hear us. So when our server doesn't hear anything coming from a they call it a DJ but a broadcaster. It automatically kicks back to the other feed. So it wasn't hearing us so that the technical hiccup

was this guy, but that was a lot of wire 3333 sets. I guess we'll put these pictures in the chapter chapter images and you'll be able to see them there and It is a bunch of wires. Wow. Very exciting stuff.

Leila

A lot of seats.

David

So it looks like you've got a looking at 71470 Cool lots of really cool controls for the lights very futuristic Star Trek Next Generation looking. Control Panel you get and tilt and pan he can move operation of hexagons, lots of hexagons.

Leila

So like how good the contrast of the colors Boo-Bury: where are you in the cats folder?

David

I m n the folder that you linked directly to? Oh, yes. Boo-Bury: The Yeah, those hexagons, that's actually a it was an antique Kaleidoscope that we had found that a Oh, nice to have antique shop, thrift store, market, whatever. And I clicked on all the lights, as you know, as saturated as I could have pointed it right at the brand. I have. Oh, man, I don't have one of the best pictures of the actual cat said I'll see if I

can try and find it. You can kind of piece together what the deck looked like it was this giant kind of collage of all these old sort of newsprint travel magazine collage piece, really. So once you hit that color on the deck, and then you hit the kaleidoscope with it, it really just erupted with colors. Pretty cool. Oh, yeah.

Leila

About that. So cool.

David

Now I'm sitting here digging through this, this folder. Very neat

Leila

that we had at the place that I

David

can I share this folder on our show notes. I would just different one. Boo-Bury: Yes, I'm okay. Let me just make sure that I didn't forget to point. Okay, no problem. I'll Yeah, well, I can I mean, I can also make a folder on one of my servers for it to Boo-Bury: Okay. Now, I would actually probably do that, because I can't Yeah, I'll tell them. I'll make a folder as always exist, try to pull down some stuff that that we've talked about. That's

what I try and do anyway. But yes, going going on tour or having a show that's touring and working on it that it seems like it would be really hectic for the behind the scenes people. Boo-Bury: mean, it's really like you get in sixth. Okay, so I guess to kind of double back for a hot second. And say answer. Again, we lose question and what my favorite show was, my favorite show that I was ever paid for was a tour that I did

called 42nd Street. It's a older musical all about tap dancing and Broadway, it's got a whole show inside of a show that they're trying to put on. And that was my first official full length tour. So I was at the shop, actually, I got a folder for this one too, if you go back and look in the 42nd Street one. But the we started in the shop, we built the lighting rig. So PRG is the company that we went through, essentially, they have like a pick and pool with the scanner and the barcodes and

everything. It's like, okay, so I need this type of lighting trust, and I need these type of lights. And I'm gonna grab this amount of cable and you just pull it all into your sort of Bay. And you, you build your show up. And it was that was probably the first time I hit a job. I was like, oh, yeah, this is something I could do for a living just building the rigs. Send them out the tour. Ah, Be still my beating heart. Yeah, that sounds cool.

Boo-Bury: Because you're like, Well, you gotta like lay out all the cables, you got to make sure all the connectors because every piece of trust at it needs to keep the lights in it. And you need to keep the cables with it. Because you don't want to set that up every week. That would just it would be madness. So, gotta make sure everything lands in the right spot as far as your power and data drops are concerned. And then your color coding like a madman. I mean, at the risk of sounding like a

jerk, you really have to make your gear. So easy to understand that. Anybody, literally anybody, and I've seen this happen, literally anyone could walk up and say, Hey, I need a job. And they let the person in there. And then that's who you're working with for the day, right? Yeah, like so you've got a whole gamut of experience and technical ability that you're

dealing with. So you've got like a you got to really, you know, cable, orange two plugs into port orange to, you know, Boo-Bury: here's a, here's a here's a big ol pile of this is all of the I'm looking at a whole bunch of cables right now that all have different colored ends and labels written on him. Boo-Bury: So So for these, they they tie back to our demo racks. And that way you know that when you're looking at a red cable as an example, it's either dealing with a particular type of light

or it's landing in one specific location. I don't quite remember how we had this one broke up, I think, I think these are color coded based on the actual fixtures that we were powering. But everything that this cable plugs into is going to be orange

all the way down the chain. So the that's what I tell ya what I always wanted when I was doing networking stuff, like I wanted all of the patch cables to be the same color and then the cables that actually went out to workstations I wanted those to all be the same color.

And I want you know, I wanted all that but then like the guy who I tell this to just orders wherever he wants a checkbook, you know, we got another live boosts 17,776 Somebody's stealing your number and that person Oh, yeah, that person Oh, yeah, it's okay just give me a second here. It's from Sir Spencer. From Potter's it says blueberry is my celebrity crush. Oh sure all Hey, sir Spencer thank you so much for the booth

we would definitely appreciate that. And but yeah, the cabling is is amazing i gotta say and get these pictures I'll try and get them into the chapters. I'll put them in the folder for for Dred Scott to use. Or I might do the chapters This week I'm not sure but these the if you're not able to see the picture it's probably 150 150 cables. All will Boo-Bury: look different when we're looking at here are known as SOCO breakouts, SOCO is a type of cable that's got

essentially six circuits shot through it. So normal eccentric cord, right, you're gonna have a hot neutral ground cable, right? normal everyday household cable. That's essentially what a SOCO cable is but six of them combined into together so you don't have to sit there and run six individual cables everywhere that you got to go. You can just do the one thicker one that's usually taped together. Actually, if you look in the corner, you see the one that's got the sort of hemp rope tied

around it. And the big white label on the side that's a Sacco cable. I think I might so when you tie your breakout into it, it fans out to six circuits that you can drop anywhere. That's really cool. Yeah, and there's two types of connectors there's a I'm guessing l 620. Or l 520. Which are the round ones those

are Twistlock connectors. They plug them in there and you give it just a quarter terminal lock in place there's actually teeth on the pins that slide into the plastic and will latch it shut. That's because there's always you know, Stephens walking around not paying attention what he's doing and trips over a wire.

Leila

Stupid Stephen Boo-Bury: go back to school Stephen

David

old Stephen the taught the wire tripper. I remember old Stephen, we always we always give people names. Boo-Bury: But if you if the resolution kind of sucks on these pictures are old and this is probably 2014 may be questioned. You could still see what it is. It's piles and piles and piles of wires. But yeah, that I love the fact that they are all labeled like that, right? There just warms warms my heart. Boo-Bury: Oh, yeah. I mean, that's, well, you gotta take necessary for that though.

Boo-Bury: I really you if you need to go and break her off a specific light. Because whatever reason it got smacked around real hard in the truck on transport. Now it's behaving like a wild man. You need to be able to go to that specific breaker and be like, Oh, okay, well, I know for sure for certain that when I flipped this one, I'm going to turn that light off, right.

Boo-Bury: So essentially, there would be there would be a label on the breaker itself above the top with a piece of colored tape behind it. And you could you could trace that color and you can trace that label all the way through the line to where you get to your actual light. So so when you take all of this gear to a new venue, how long would it take to set it all up? Boo-Bury: It really depends on how much the or how many trucks you have. How intense of a setup you got 42nd Street was. It was

a nice lean show. I mean, there was some really big, big heavy set pieces there was a to bleachers that the PRG scenic shop had modified modified, and they'd put them on air casters. So you would fill them up with a compressed air compressor and then flip a switch and there'd be air casters that would engage in actually lifts these 5000 pound bleachers up, and you'd be able to move them around. And I mean, that was like, that was a

pretty big set piece. But everything else, all things considered, I mean, this show, we got to the point where if we're doing a one off, so one off being one day, we load in starting six o'clock, get through to lunch, when we really hit our groove, and let me tell you why. Like, we we nailed this show that we had a phenomenal flow, it was just, we're slammed the show and slam the show out. It's, it was a well oiled

machine. And we got to the point where we can walk around or walk around, we can walk, or we can leave and go back to the bus or the hotel or go sleep in our chair, probably two o'clock. So 678-910-1112, one to nine hours, eight hours, somewhere in there. And then we'd come back for presets at two hours before doors, check everything make sure everything works. Do the

show, load it out. And this show I think we got down to like I think we had a load out those like 315 ish, three hours, 15 minutes, which is pretty fast. Yeah, that's, that's pretty, that's pretty good. No, like I was looking at looking at how much gears and these pictures and whatnot, and having to, you know, you don't know this venue, you got to figure out how you're going to do it, and then start doing it. You know, that's, Boo-Bury: well, here's a good example of the situation you

might not ever expect to find yourself in. You might have heard me joke about it with lavish before but in Bellingham, Washington, when you're looking at the stage door, you're looking at a giant sandstone boulder. So then, when we pack the truck up, you have to come in from the side and build a ramp city. And it's just ramp and platforms everywhere. It's crazy. Like, well, this is Sansa. I mean, I'm sitting here rubbing it away with my finger, you can just power wash this thing.

Don't get it. Just look, I found the picture. Because when you sent me the link in the chat, it just goes to the folder. I was like I'm clicking around looking looking for the picture. But yeah, I see that. Just a big old rock. And there's just some dude standing in front of the rock. Boo-Bury: It was a Oh, yeah. So that would have been that's our head carpenter there. And then my head electricians in the back there that feel I feel like you can get rid of it. I feel like

that. Like you could stick a whole building there. That's a huge rock. Yeah, that's, yeah, that's prime real estate. You know, that's, you know what I was saying? Maybe it's an ancient Indian burial ground or something and they can't. You don't want to disturb you. There's a mummy in there. Don't disturb the DJ. I Boo-Bury: hope it's the mummy, or a giant.

Leila

So have you ever had like a favorite venue? Boo-Bury: Oh. It depends on what capacity there is. And what job I guess really is what it breaks down to. Because I have I have done some tours as a spotlight operator. And the booths are I mean, that's a space that nobody bought the spot operators ever see in there a lot of times old, like reclaimed projection booths, right? The probably the one that gets me the like, I just I get so excited to be up in there. And it's always the

ones that have the most quote unquote personality to them. If you back out and go to the bodyguard tour, you'll see some lights of string lights posted everywhere. That's the catwalk into this old little projection booth where the spotlight part

David

that's kind of cool. Like you can do color correction on that picture and make it into like a stock photo. Boo-Bury: It's yeah, I think I did kind of do that are where to go saw it. I just saw it. I don't know why it's not letting me think it's this one. I really I can I'm such a huge sucker for that. But as far as like actually getting the de show in the door and set up and ready to go. Durham Performing Arts Center. That's right up the road.

Boo-Bury: Yeah, no. They are Are savage when it comes to moving a show they are in it's a really well laid out venue to win to get a nice big concrete paddle backing and get multiple trucks backed up to it. You got nice deck space everywhere so you can Yeah, yeah, we, my wife and I had planned to go see Colleen Ballenger there a couple months ago but it it fell through because she was sick. So we didn't actually get to go to the to the venue. And now she's embroiled in a huge scandal online.

Leila

He was gonna reschedule for September, but yeah, I don't know they got their money back.

David

Yeah, I don't know if if we're gonna go see her. Not sure. Are you? Are you familiar with that whole thing? I'm not that's Oh, it's not not to talk about on a kid show. So we'll just leave it. Okay. recommend looking into look it up. It's interesting. Internet drama. But oh, Boo-Bury: I will say there's some other venues that do stand out the starlight and Kansas City. If you scroll all the way down to the bodyguard folder, you'll see two images of it.

It's this giant open air venue theater. It's it's right in Spencer and Lauren's backyard. They can hear concerts from there all the time. Oh, wow. Doxxing This is Lorien right there. Boo-Bury: But the spot booth is is a just a to top two towers with the bridge. And it's open air. It's beautiful. Wow, that's

Leila

really cool. I really like it. And then anything that says Boo-Bury: the Fox Theater is really good. Like kind of 1920s super hardcore Art Deco.

David

Oh, yeah. I see that when I happen to be looking. Right at when when you start talking about it. That's got the old it's got like the old lights on the on the front. Yeah, that's neat. Yeah, well, we'll get these in the end of the at least the show notes, if not the chapters, we're all trying to try and get into the chapters. But blueberry it I believe you have a heart out. Boo-Bury: And yeah, I do. I do sadly. But I'm definitely game to you know, if you ever want to do a follow up and get more

questions. Yeah. Or we can come up with a topic and make you go research it that's it. But yeah, we're wanting to get more guests. If you if you know anybody that knows a lot about a particular subject or if you know a lot about a particular subject or you just want to come on you think you're entertaining enough to hang out with us for you know half hour to an hour and you get enough punk to thank you good enough. We can pick the topic

and send it to you. We just kind of want to talk to folks and see you know just have a have a good time and and socialize a little bit.

Leila

So quick question. If you could meet any animation, any cartoon character who would you meet? Hmm, this definitely has to do with the the show

David

huh Boo-Bury: the Roger Rabbit would be pretty cool. He's He's so goofy. What are you talking to you? I think he was my favorite part of that movie is when he's he's stuck in the jail cell. And he climbs out of it for some reason and does something and then gets back in and like you gotta climb out of that. So anytime you wanted. And he's like, No, only when it was funny remember that one little scene from that movie my whole life.

And the other thing about Roe Who Framed Roger Rabbit was watching the behind the scenes of how they did the little penguin waiters at the the club, carrying the actual trays with drinks on it and everything. I thought it was so neat. They had like little tracks in the ground. They had like these little robot arms hooked to to hold the drinks and then they covered them up with the animation that I remember that

piqued my interest in special effects. That was one of the first ones I saw that kind of special effect, but what's super cool, Leila Yeah, what anime character you want to meet?

Leila

I don't even know. It's like I had this question. I'll

David

set up. You met Kyle a bear. He plays a lot of animated characters. Yeah. Ice Cube soup in the chat says wily Coyote. He's just going to try and bum money from you because he is in debt to the Acme Corporation. Yeah, he's in a lot of debt. But blueberry thank you for coming on the show. Blueberry is on a show called behind the schemes and that's in the word schemes, the ease or threes. However, it's not a kid show Oh, that's,

Boo-Bury: that is fact. And I'm using even a disclaimer to, to make sure that it's a make sure it's known, but again, not for kids. Yep. Yeah, he clipped you clip that a long time ago. That's an older one and a really old one. But maybe we'll do a produced a new one for you. Yeah, you got just got to stick with the old one, even if there's a new one. But yeah, not not a kid show blueberry plus plus. I agree. So we're in the entertainment industry with this podcast.

Leila

Background noise? I

David

got it. Yeah, no, we sound a lot better. Now. The most recent thing that I said that I forgot to go and clip it is. Leila asked me a question. And I was like, here's a lesson. And like, I don't know why I said here's a lesson. But I was like, here's the lesson. I don't know. I don't know. But anyway, I gotta clip that. Thank you for coming on everybody. Round. I don't have the round of applause clip on here. Got you, boo. Yeah, check out a show. And this, what was this

episode supposed to be brought to us by Ctrl C and Ctrl? Yes, this episode is brought to you by copying and pasting on your keyboard, if you hold down the CTRL button, and then press the C it will copy whatever you have highlighted. And if you press Ctrl V, it will paste it. And just a bonus. We had an extra response sponsor come in right at the end. And here. If you hit

Ctrl X, it will cut it and not just copy it. So there's a couple of little couple little tips for you in the form of a sponsor message.

Leila

This concludes today's sponsor, yes.

David

All right. So I'll actually close out this this call.

Leila

I'll let you go your answer to the animated question. Okay. Next episode. Boo-Bury: No, what? A whole week.

David

Yes, absolutely. That's how you that's how you keep people engaged. cliffhangers? Boo-Bury: I don't I don't know how I feel about this. But yeah, we'll let you go since you said you had a heart out. And actually Leila has to get going to she's got something going on tonight. So we're gonna go ahead and I'll go ahead and end this call. And we will wrap up the show. And we will talk to you later. Thanks for coming on.

Boo-Bury: Yeah, not a problem. I appreciate it. And y'all be well stay dangerous. Oh, I'll try. Oh, thank you. Lila, no, that's not for you. You stay safe. All right, and then get that to Yep, there we go. Boop. So yeah, now we've got to wrangle up all these pictures that that boo has sent to us. And I believe that will probably be it for this episode of Fun Fact Friday. And if you have any, any questions or corrections or even just any fun stories or comments, yeah, I mean, I think those things

Leila

are complaints. To be heard you say that.

David

Bullies. Bullies deed says, oh, today. Oh, did I turn off the Hello?

Leila

What did you do? Alright, let's keep going.

David

Okay, so yeah, blue seed says Ctrl. C copy Ctrl. P paste. Got it today, I learned. Oh, wow.

Leila

That's not how that works. That's not how that works. I used to think that was how it works.

David

So we will

Leila

see you next time.

David

Yes, we'll see you next week. And oh, yeah. So

Leila

I want to end the episode before you start playing with all the stuff because we're having

David

technical difficulties. Yeah, it's fine. All right. Bye, everybody.

Leila

Sorry, by Kylea thing to guess who was here. And now Kyle

Kyle Hebert

is a neatest media production. All rights reserved. Unless otherwise. If you'd like to help support the show, you can make a donation via Patreon or PayPal over at FunFactFriday.com. Just click the donations at the top of the page. Please follow like and subscribe. And join us next week for another Fun Fact Friday.

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