One year in....

Wow, what a year it has been!  I’m posting this almost a year to the day NYC locked down and the world as we know it changed.   2020 was hard.  I could sit here, show off all the work I (eventually) shot in 2020 and pretend it was easy, but I won’t, 2020 was hard!    

From the very start of Covid & quarantine I took things extremely serious.  At the start of quarantine my daughter was 5 months old and our neighborhood of Jackson Heights, Queens was quickly becoming the epicenter of the US epicenter, which as a new parent made things extremely scary.  

With the option to leave the city for our somewhat unfinished rustic upstate cabin, (which we bought in 2018-- thank god, and have been slowing re-modeling) we did.  I spent the first 6 months of quarantine splitting my days between being a stay at home dad and a home renovator. The combo did wonders for my metal health.  If there was one time in my life for my professional work to take a back seat, it was now.  I was able to spend so much time with my daughter.  I was home for her first steps and her first words.  Those precious moments will always be the silver lining of Quarantine, the ability to spend almost every moment of every day of the first year of my daughter’s life at home with her.

I barely worked between March and September.  The few shoots that kept me busy during this period were pickups for EU production that couldn’t shoot in the US.  The two notable shoots were contributing to an Alan Walker x Hans Zimmer music video and a few steadicam / lifestyle shots for an EU Porsche Spot.  I made monthly trips back to NYC for shoots or to check in on our apartment in Queens.  Each trip felt like a time-lapse, seeing how the city had changed and adapted to Covid.  

Through Summer of 2020 I had a lot of false starts to work, bids and holds that geared up fast but then disappeared as quickly.  However by September of 2020 things really started to gear up.  I Directed/DP’ed an awesome project for Rolling Stone right in Woodstock, NY (only 30 minutes from our Cabin).  Then as I continued to get busier and my wife’s work also picked up we decided to pack our bags and go to Los Angeles, to my in-laws, for a few months.   With the ability to hustle, (Thank you grandparents!) I was able to work a bunch.  I shot a series of broadcast spots for Proactiv and also shot a chef series featuring Tim Hollingsworth, Suzanne Goin and Mei Lin.

Fast forward a few months and it’s now 2021, one year to the day the world locked down.  After returning to NY from CA we spent the winter upstate. Luckily, I had the opportunity to shoot an awesome 100% remote job for Intuit and then Directed/DP’ed a weeklong commercial food studio project.  As much as we love being in the Hudson Valley, my wife and I decided to return to NYC. We are now back in our apartment in Queens.  The neighborhood of Jackson Heights is as lively and populated as ever.  A few stores have closed, but in general the neighborhood has retained the bustling hustle of every-day NYC.  We have a lovely nanny-share with our neighbors and both my wife and I are finding the balance of life and work.  We will still be upstate as much as possible, but the time felt right to readjust our lives back to the city. 

One last work note.  In the last year I really feel I have done every form of Covid era production.  I have instructed 100% drop-kit shoots, I have worked with remote agencies and production companies from around the world, I have worked on larger 50+ person sets, I have also shot solo when needed (at the beginning of Covid).  I have flown to LA twice, I have been Covid tested so many times I’ve lost count.   Every step of the way I have taken set safety and Covid compliance extremely seriously.  As a department head I feel an extra sense of responsibility.  

I think 2020 was a real humbling experience that taught me to not take any work for granted.  As production ramps up in 2021 I’m super excited to see pre-covid levels of work returning and hope all corners (and crew) of our industry continue to get busier and busier. 


From top to bottom:

Alan Walker x Hans Zimmer Music Video - NYC UNIT DP
Westholme Wagyu x Tim Hollingworths - (DP - LA)
Proactiv - :30 broadcast shoot - (DP - LA)
Westholme Wagyu x Suzanne Goin (DP - LA)
Westholme Wagyu x Mei Lin (DP - LA)
Porsche: What Drives US - EU Broadcast spot (NYC UNIT DP)
United Therapeutics - The Future - (DP)

And below are a handful of BTS photos.

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ABOVE: As with a lot of DPs, I’ve been starting to use the Hudson Spiders a lot more. I love the ability to throw them on a boom arm and quickly adjust for subjects features. I haven’t owned a single piece of lighting gear, ever, but I’m seriously considering buying a Hudson Spider.

BELOW: For the Proactiv spots I paired the ARRI MiniLF with the new ARRI signature primes. We shoot open gate in order to deliver 16x9 and also various social aspect ratios.

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YES!  I shot my daughter’s first birthday on my ARRI.

YES! I shot my daughter’s first birthday on my ARRI.

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Here is a good idea of why its important to NOT be a lens snob or get stuck on just one look. Each project has different needs. The Anamorphic 75 SF was for an ESPN documentary interviews. The show’s DP in LA set the look, I was simply matching it for the NYC portion. The Anamorphic give the interviews a very distinctive look, helping to set the series apart. The Canon 50-1000 couldn’t be more of a different lens, but atlas a different project where we needed the extreme reach.

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Above: Gabriel Pimenta rocking the Steaidcam for an EU Porsche spot.
ARRI Amira piared with vintage Zeiss B-Speeds

RUSSIAN ARMS, A REAL WEDDING & FAST CARS

I love cars, maybe not as much as motorcycles, but damn close. My dad was a gear head and my grandfather was an auto body mechanic.  So when the opportunity came to pitch on a project for Porsche, I was stoked.

Working with Picture Farm Production, and the agencies Cramer-Krasselt, Fake Love, PHD, we had the changeling of creating commercial level spots while working around an actual wedding with real talent!  The most important goal was to not interfere with the actual wedding and to really respect the couples big day (something I can totally understand since I just got married myself).

We ended splitting production between the couples real wedding day, where we shot very doc style, combined with a pick up day with a Russian Arm.  I really love the documentary world and I also love shooting sexy footage, so this project was absolutely project for me.  The final edits are pretty fun and getting to spend multiple days at the Atlanta Porsche track was just icing on the cake! 

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PORSCHE: FAST LOVE
A sports car wedding you could only dream up. A real couple, a real moment and some really fast cars!

Client: Porsche USA
Agencies:
Cramer-Krasselt, Fake Love, PHD
Production Company: Picture Farm Productions
Director / DP: Andrew David Watson
Atlanta Russian Arm: Filmotechnic USA

 

SUPER 16MM FOR SWEETGREEN x DAN BARBER

Hello Super 16mm, its been years.  And I mean years.  I’m a proud graduate of Temple University (in Philadelphia).  Without giving my age away, all I’ll say is when I was at Temple U most of us still shot our senior thesis films on Film.  Temple was (and maybe still is?) an Aaton Super16mm school.  I learned how to load mags on aaton a-minima, LTRs and XTRs.  We were a state school, so no fancy ARRI 416s for us, just the good old Aatons work horses! 

I’ve been waiting for the right project to come around to shoot on film.  A lot of projects have been using mixed media, including 8mm, 16mm and Super 16mm, but I knew I wanted to find a project to solely shoot on film.   Long last came the opportunity to Direct/DP sweetgreen’s fall video campaign, staring world renown Chef Dan Barber (of Blue Hill and Chef’s Table fame). 

Early on in preproduction we decided we didn’t want the videos to look like Chef’s table, which Dan is so well known for, so I proposed shooting some Super 16mm to change things up!  Everyone agreed that sounded rad.  However, we had 7 videos to shoot, and I knew (timing / budget) we couldn’t shoot them all on film.  So instead we used an ARRI AMIRA with Standard Speeds for most of the production, and then reserved the Super16mm (In this case an Aaton XTR with the Canon 8-64mm T2.4 Super-16 Lens for the must have shots).  In total we shot 7 rolls of film, mostly Kodak 50D and some 250D. 

By the end of editorial, Super16 had made its way into each edit, really helping to create some wonderful contrast with the ARRI AMIRA footage.  I also got my wish of making a purely film FILM by shooting enough material with Dan Barber to create a 100% Super16mm film profiling his philosophies.  

Picture Farm Production handled both production and post on this project.  The Dan Barber Anthem pieced was colored by Kath Raisch @ Company 3.

One last note on film.  Kodak recently opened a new lab in NYC and its less then 2 miles from my home (and also in Queens!)  We were able to drop film off, have it processed, scanned and ready in 24 to 48 hours.  With the new Kodak lab as a resource in NYC, I’ll be pushing to shoot more and more film!

And thanks to my wonderful AC Gabriel Pimenta for his knowledge of the Aaton XTR. It was a pleasure.  

 
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SWEETGREEN x DAN BARBER

Chef and co-owner of Blue Hill, James Beard award winner, author of The Third Plate, and farm-to-table frontrunner Dan Barber on how millennial appetites for authenticity are shaping a new food culture.

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Shot on Kodak Super16mm 50D / 250D Aaton
XTR, Canon 8-64mm T2.4

Director/DP: Andrew David Watson
Production Company: Picture Farm Productions
Client: Sweetgreen
Editor: Isabel Freeman
1st AC & Additional Opt: Gabriel Pimenta
Colorist: Kath Raisch @ Company3

And here are a few of my favorite screen garbs: