The setup, the equipment roadmap, and what we are doing about the problems episode 1 surfaced. Companion to 09-podcast-production-standards.md, which holds the pre-shoot checklist and camera settings.
The show is recorded, not broadcast. Almost nothing is decided in the room.
Every camera rolls continuously. Ryan records himself. All audio records separately. Every choice about what the viewer sees, which angle, when to show Ryan full screen, where B-roll goes, happens in Premiere afterward.
The one exception is section 02.
The projection wall and the CRT are not just for the people in the room. The cameras see them. Whatever is displayed there is baked into the wide shot permanently and cannot be changed in Premiere.
A dedicated machine driving those displays, with someone choosing what is on them. Not a broadcast switcher. Closer to running a presentation.
| Option | How it works | Verdict |
|---|---|---|
| Laptop, two outputs, manual | Ryan's call window on one display, a media window on the other. Drag and drop what you want. | Start here. Free. Proves what we actually need before we buy for it. |
| OBS on a PC | Scenes and hotkeys. One keystroke per look. Can composite Ryan and media together. | Right answer once the format settles and we know what the looks are. |
| HDMI switcher | Physical box, physical buttons, source per screen. | Only if we outgrow software. Adds a box, adds cables. |
1. Screens on camera are a lighting problem too. The projector wash was a major light source in episode 1 and it fought the key lights. Whatever we display changes the color of the room. Bright white slides will wash the wide shot.
2. This is a second job during the show. Someone watches the conversation and drives the screens. If that is the same person watching the cameras, we should say so out loud and see if it holds.
1. Ryan is the only file that takes a detour. Everything else copies straight in. His recording is variable frame rate and has to be converted to a constant rate before Premiere touches it, or sync drifts silently.
2. Renaming happens in the folder, never in Premiere. Rename after import and the project loses the link. Media offline.
The Rodecaster lane is empty for ep1. From ep2 onward it carries the real audio, and camera audio goes back to being sync glue only.
Full step by step in 10-premiere-episode-workflow.md.
The principle: every knob set to Auto is a decision the camera makes without you, and you pay for it in the edit. Items marked in red are ones ep1 proved the hard way.
| Role | Camera | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Wide | FX30 | The unmatched body goes on the shot we cut to least |
| Close, Jordan | matched body A | |
| Close, guest | matched body B | |
| Ryan | his own recording | Remote. Separate file, synced in post. |
The reasoning: the most frequent cut in the show is host close-up to guest close-up. Those two shots must match exactly or the seam shows. So the two matched bodies go there, and the odd body takes the wide.
That is why FX30 on wide is right. Not because it is the weakest camera, it isn't, but because it is the one without a twin.
Note: the wide is also the shot carrying the projector and CRT. It is the establishing shot and the screens shot at once.
We have a subscription with a local media company. Rentals are free. Cost is not driving this decision.
| Friction | Effect |
|---|---|
| The drive | Pickup and return, every episode. Time, not money. |
| Inconsistency | Different bodies or lenses week to week means different settings, different color, different look. |
| The checklist can't be specific | We can't write "set the a6700 to X" if we don't know what shows up. Standards need fixed hardware. |
| No muscle memory | Nobody gets fast on gear that changes. |
| Availability risk | The thing we planned around might be out. |
The argument for buying is not money. It is repeatability. We cannot build a repeatable setup on gear that changes.
Corollary: rentals are excellent for testing. Free trials of anything. Use them that way deliberately. Try a body or lens for an episode before committing to two.
Everything here addresses something that actually went wrong in episode 1. Repair, not upgrade.
| Item | ~Cost | Fixes |
|---|---|---|
| Rodecaster Pro II | $700 | Separate audio per mic, mix-minus for Ryan, four headphone outs. The whole audio problem, one box. |
| Dynamic mics x3 | $300 | Reject the untreated room instead of recording it |
| Earbuds x4 | $80 | Kills the speaker to mic echo loop |
| Key lights x2 | $250 | Cam 1 had one and was the frame we all liked. Cams 2 and 3 didn't. |
| 2 TB external SSD | $130 | Blocking. Ep1 is 101 GB. Weekly, that's 400 GB a month. The C: drive has 115 GB free, and Premiere needs cache room on top of media. |
| Tripods x3 | $400 | Stop renting. Stable, identical framing every week. |
| Camera settings pass | free | One frame rate, one profile, manual focus, manual white balance |
| Ask Ryan to record locally | free | Deletes the variable frame rate and pause problem |
| Laptop driving the screens | free | Use what we have. Learn what we need before buying for it. |
Ep1 measured 101 GB across five files (two 4K cameras, one at 95 Mbps). At one episode a week that is roughly 400 GB a month. A 1 TB drive fills by autumn, so buy 2 TB.
Everything lives on the external: footage, backups, the Premiere project, cache, exports. The system drive stops being part of this.
Buy the tripods regardless of anything else on this list. Highest friction rental, lowest price.
Only once Phase 1 proves the format holds.
| Item | ~Cost | Note |
|---|---|---|
| Sony a6700 x2 | $2,800 | Same sensor family, color science, and lens mount as the FX30. Cut between them, no seam. |
| Sigma 18-50mm f/2.8 x2 | $1,100 | The close-up lenses. Sharp, compact, covers every seated framing. |
| Wide lens for FX30 | $450 | Sigma 16mm f/1.4 or Sony 11mm f/1.8 |
Where: Best Buy is fine for bodies. Return policy, and you can hold one. Bad for lenses, they stock almost nothing. B&H or Adorama for glass.
Test first. Rent an a6700 for an episode before buying two. That is what the subscription is for.
| Item | ~Cost | Note |
|---|---|---|
| HDMI multiviewer + monitor | $400 | All three cameras on one screen at the producer's seat. Catches a soft camera at minute two instead of in the edit. Doesn't record, doesn't switch, doesn't touch audio. |
| Written rundown | free | Segments and timings on paper. Saves more edit time than any purchase here. |
| Clip log | free | Someone notes the time when something lands. Feeds clip selection later. |
Each camera must output clean HDMI while recording, meaning picture only, no menus or focus boxes overlaid. The FX30 does. Confirm the other two before buying the multiviewer. Look for "HDMI Info Display," "Clean HDMI," or "Display Info Output."
Money spent on looks before the format stabilizes gets spent twice.
If Ryan's voice comes out of a speaker it goes into all three camera mics and every open mic in the room. That is echo, and it cannot be removed afterward.
Earbuds break the loop. Cheapest fix available, biggest effect.
Send his own voice back and he hears himself delayed. He'll stumble and stop talking.
The Rodecaster does this without patching.
A condenser hears the whole room: projector fan, chairs, street. A dynamic mic six inches from a mouth hears the mouth.
The room is untreated and hard-surfaced.
Every camera records audio so Premiere can align the files automatically. It never appears in the finished show.
A camera recording no audio has to be aligned by hand, every week.
Light the faces. Lock focus, WB, exposure. 23.98 everywhere. Clap. Don't pause. Audio on every camera.
Six things. Everything below is the detail. The principle: every knob set to Auto is a decision the camera makes without you, and you pay for it in the edit.
Two cameras were fine. One was soft. Nobody looked at all three. "Check the cameras" is not a check. Walking to each camera and confirming the shot is.
Capture better inputs on the front end so there is less heavy lifting in the edit. Every hour lost on ep1 traces back to a knob nobody set. None of it was a skill problem and none of it was fixable in Premiere.
| Cam | File | Rate | Res | Length | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | C4177 | 23.98 | 4K | 45:16 | The reference. Lit, sharp, correct color. |
| 2 | C3780 | 59.94 | 1080p | 45:44 | FX30. Log, washed by design. Odd rate and odd resolution. |
| 3 | C3777 | 29.97 | 4K | 45:33 | Audio confirmed. No key light, so soft. |
| Ryan p1 | 23.76 var | Needs constant frame rate transcode before import | |||
| Ryan p2 | 24 | Clean |
All three cameras: stereo, 48 kHz, audio present and audible.
Episode weight: 101 GB. That is the number that sizes storage.
His recording is a clean, framed, mic'd shot of his face. When he talks, we cut to it full screen in Premiere. Separately, his live feed is what the projector and CRT show during the shoot, which is section 02.
Ryan records locally and sends the file. Same seat, same camera, but recording on his end instead of through the meeting kills the variable frame rate, the compression, and probably the pause.
Known and accepted: his image is webcam-soft against cinema cameras, and his color is warm where the room is blue. Every remote guest show has this. It is a grade, not a setting.
| Question | Owner | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| Who runs the in-room screens? | Chris | It is a live job with no undo. If it is the same person watching cameras, say so and test it. |
| What goes on the screens besides Ryan? | Chris, Jordan | Sizes the whole screen-control question. Right now it is a guess. |
| All-log or all-standard? | Jordan | One camera on log and two off is the worst of both. Someone hand-matches every week. |
| Can Ryan record locally? | Chris | One ask. Deletes the worst editing problem. Free. |
| Do Cams 1 and 3 output clean HDMI? | Chris | Gates the multiviewer purchase. Free to check. |
| Frame rate, 23.98 confirmed? | Chris, Jordan | With no switcher, nothing constrains this. 23.98 is the look we picked. Stands unless Jordan objects. |
| Rent an a6700 for an episode first? | Chris | The subscription makes this free. Do it before buying two. |
| Why was Cam 3 soft? | Chris | Almost certainly low light plus AF hunt. Confirm it wasn't a dirty lens. |
| Is 95 Mbps on Cam 1 necessary? | Jordan | It is driving the episode weight. If a lower bitrate holds up, storage stops growing this fast. |