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Vincent Laforet recently used Marshall's V-LCD70P-HDMI with the RED / Canon 5D Mark II cameras on-location in Hawaii with surfer Jamie O'Brien.
Vincent Laforet is a New York-based commercial and editorial photographer who is regularly commissioned to work on a variety of fine art, advertising, corporate and editorial projects. His approach to aerial photography has been singled out as one of the most unique and interpretive amongst photographers today. Vincent was recognized as one of the "100 Most Influential People in Photography" by American Photo Magazine in 2005 and was named one of the "30 photographers to watch under 30" by PDN in 2002. He and four other photographers were awarded the Pulitzer Prize in Feature Photography for their post-9/11 coverage overseas in 2002.
At the age of 33, his work has been published in most major publications around the world and he has been sent on assignment by Vanity Fair, The New York Times Magazine, National Geographic, Sports Illustrated, Time, Newsweek, and Life Magazine. In 2006, Laforet modified his staff position at The New York Times to become The Times' first national contract photographer.
For more information on this shoot, please click HERE
For more information on Vincent Laforet, please click HERE
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Using infrared / video technology in police helicopters is extremely valuable to officers on the ground and the general public. The San Diego Police Department integrates Marshall monitors
(V-R104DP-HDA) with FLIR's thermal imaging system in five of their helicopters. |
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IMS' satellite truck uses multiple V-R53P-SDI units, along with the AR-DM2-L Digital Audio Monitor
International Media Services (IMS) offers 24-hour "end-to-end" television production and transmission solutions worldwide for coverage of special, sporting, news, entertainment, corporate, and cultural events.
IMS currently accommodates the production and transmission needs of clients, such as ESPN, NASCAR Images, CNBC, Univision, Globecast, NHK, TBS, FUJI TV, Reuters, CNN, TV Azteca, Azteca America, IEC in Sports, Televisa Mexico, APTN, MTV Latin America, and Telecomm Mexico.
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Australia's Global Television offers the largest and most advanced OB vans in the southern hemisphere. Their HD1 and HD2 "super trucks" were entirely designed and built in Australia and provide the largest production area of any Australian OB van. These state-of-the-art units offer seating for 33 operators and accommodate up to 38 cameras and 24 video replay channels.
Global TV's HD1 OB van uses the following Marshall products:
(31) dual 10.4" IMD monitors (V-R1042-IMD-TE4U)
(16) 17" IMD monitors (V-R171-IMD-HDSDI)
(11) dual 8.4" monitors (V-R842DP-AFHD)
(2) 23 " IMD monitors (V-R231-IMD-HDSDI)
(1) Network Control Box (NCB-1004) |
Corplex is a leader in live television broadcasting. They operate a number of mobile production and support units covering sports, news and entertainment events throughout the US and Canada.
Their 53' Expando HD Mobile unit ("Iridium") features the following Marshall monitors:
(70) Marshall 20" IMD monitors (V-R201-IMD-TE)
(56) Marshall dual 10.4" IMD monitors (V-R1042-IMD-TE4U)
(4) Marshall single 10.4" IMD monitors (V-R1041-IMD-TE4U)
Their new 53' Graphics & Support Mobile Unit ("Zinc") will also feature (20) Marshall 20" IMD monitors (V-R201-IMD-TE). Both trucks went online August 2008 and will continue to support various events such as CBS NFL Football, TNT Sports, Major League Baseball playoffs, ALCS (American League Championship Series), and NCAA / NBA Basketball. |
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CNN Headline News -- V-R25P
in the righthand corner |
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NBC Chicago
V-R25P and V-R72P
in the center of the editor's desk
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Front Cover of January 2003 Broadcast Engineering:
V-R53P-SDI &
V-R72P-2SDI (center) installed in the audio room of National Mobile
Television (NMT) HD3 |
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Front Cover of April 2002 Mix Magazine: National
Mobile Television DX11 truck. V-R72P-2C
(in the center) |
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Time Warner Cable (NY) Control
Room |
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