We are working feverishly on refining all four hours of programs at once
-- adding yet more pictures, film footage, motion and still graphics and
sound effects. The fifth round of cuts will be available for review the
first week of July. We are also evaluating all the script changes as Robert
Redford is scheduled to record the final narration tracks in Santa Monica
also in July. While all the above preparation continues, Mitchell Covington
is turning out volumes of music for the series score. Many of our planned
shoots the past week have been affected by the smoky haze that has engulfed
the entire Bay Area. We were also hoping to go up for higher altitude
aerial shots in a DC-3 but the smoky skies have put that on hold.
As for content, late additions to the script include a segment on Delta
salmon runs, a brief look at the refurbished Ferry Building and ferry
service, coverage of the recent oil spill and enhanced pieces on Indian
shellmounds, invasive species and oaks.
A new addition to the team is Christopher MacDonald, who is working on
this website and starting a viral marketing campaign as we continue to
seek completion funds -- please help support the project either by going
to the Donate page or through KQED (please make sure to note Saving the
Bay). New underwriters include environmental consulting firm ESA, the
Koret Foundation, Potrero Nuevo Fund and Laura and John Fisher.
5/1/08
We've
just completed our third round of rough cuts for all four one hour programs
and have clearly identified the remaining "holes" still in need
of images. The past 90 days have seen the insertion of hundreds of still
images (photos, drawings, lithographs, maps), several minutes of color
and black/white historic film footage (from newsreels, news programs,
independent films) and animated graphics (created by our graphics guru
Richard Tsai). Our sources include institutions around the country --
from the New York Botanical Garden in the Bronx and the Theodore Roosevelt
Association on Long Island to the National Archives and Library of Congress
in Washington to the Society of California Pioneers, California Historical
Society and National Maritime Museum in San Francisco. A full listing
of all our generous image providers will be available upon completion
this fall.
Additional aerial shooting was completed -- some of it covering the Central
Valley -- although we still need to go up at least one more time. We are
also working on sound design and sound effects which are being added as
needed. KQED has begun testing the interfaces between our respective editing
systems as we move closer to delivering edited programs for them to engineer
for broadcast.
Due to the scope of the project, we are still raising completion funding
so please help support completion of Saving the Bay by going
to the Donate button on the left side of the navigation bar. All funds
go through KQED/Northern California Public Broadcasting and are tax-deductible
charitable donations.
1/20/08
We
continue in post-production and are working to refine four hours of rough
cuts completed in November. Several pieces are moving ahead at once including
music scoring, animated graphics and acquisition and insertion of hundreds
of still images as well as lots of historic film footage. We also recorded
two more actors' voices in Sacramento for readings of journals, diaries
and book passages and have begun adding natural sound to the four programs.
The Bancroft Library in Berkeley has been heroic in helping us identify
hundreds of historic images - photos, prints, paintings, drawings, maps
and journals - being used in the programs. And all of this with smiles!
After a final review the script underwent some last minute tweaks: The
first section of Episode 4, focusing on threats to the Bay during the
post World War II boom years, is now the last section of Episode 3 (its
original location). Episode 4 opens with the Bay in peril around 1960
due to seemingly unlimited development potential and increased fouling
of the waters from raw sewage, expansive garbage dumps and industrial
pollution. We also added a section in Episode 3 about how the Port of
Oakland is largely a man-made creation going back to the late 19th century.
Among our recent film shoots the Army Corps of Engineers arranged for
an excellent tour of the Port of Oakland dredging project where shipping
channels are being dug to 50 feet to accommodate the latest container
ships. The dredge material is then loaded onto huge barges which head
up to a pumping station in the middle of San Pablo Bay. The material is
then offloaded into a pipeline running seven miles to shore at the former
Hamilton Field where it is being used to re-create tidal wetlands on what
were recently airport runways. Completing the circle, the runways were
originally built over diked wetlands.
We are still raising completion funding so please help support completion
of Saving the Bay by going to the Donate button on the left side
of the navigation bar. All funds go through KQED/Northern California Public
Broadcasting and are tax-deductible charitable donations.
10/14/07
We recently completed recording the
narration for all four programs of the series with Robert Redford at Skywalker
Ranch. Redford generously contributed his time to the project. He was
a pleasure to work with and we received great support from his staff in
LA and Utah as well as the people at Skywalker Sound.
We also recorded six actors' voices in Sacramento for readings of journals,
diaries and book passages and have added all the sound tracks to the four
programs.
With the narration set, we are now in full post-production with music
scoring, animated graphics and the continued addition of what now looks
like about 600 still images as well as lots of historic film footage.
We plan to add some visuals from the programs to the website soon.
We also completed more location shoots:
- At the Chinese Historical Society in San Francisco, we interviewed historian
Philip Choy as well as looked through their photograph collection for
images of Chinese fishermen and shrimpers.
- At the Port of Oakland, thanks to AMNAV Navigation we were out on the
Bay in one of their new "tractor" tugs shooting two tugboats
guiding a containership to its Oakland Estuary dock.
- At the Cargill salt ponds in Newark a big thank you to Jill Singleton,
who arranged for us to capture the 2007 salt harvest as a follow up to
our earlier shoot which included on-site interviews.
- In Alameda for Coastal Cleanup Day, Save the Bay arranged for us to
shoot volunteers helping clean and restore Alameda Creek/Eden Landing.
- At Sutter's Mill in Coloma we shot footage for the Gold Rush segment
opening our second program.
Fundraising continued to progress as a handful of underwriters have recently
contributed led by the Packard Foundation's $100,000. We are still raising
money so please support completion of Saving the Bay by going
to the Donate button on the left side of the navigation bar. All funds
go to KQED/Northern California Public broadcasting and are tax-deductible
charitable donations.
07/10/07
We have been on several field shoots so the script can be finalized for
the expected narration recording in August. Areas covered include:
-Port of Oakland, where we were able to shoot from the top of their largest
container crane in addition to the unloading of a large container vessel.
-Native Grasses, thanks to East Bay Regional Parks for taking the time
to show various native grasses in the hills east of Livermore as well
as in Richmond and parts of Marin County.
-Sonoma Baylands (south of Highway 37) hay fields.
-Cargill Salt Ponds and the history and production of salt on the Bay
dating back to Native American times.
-San Jose/Santa Clara Water Pollution Treatment Plant -- the largest such
facility on the Bay, serving over 1.5 million people in the South Bay.
-Recycle Central, Norcal Waste's 200,000 square foot recycling center
at Pier 96 in San Francisco.
-San Francisco Estuary Institute's Historical Ecology program where Robin
Grossinger and his team evaluate how specific locations all around the
Bay have changed over the past 100-200 years based on historical maps,
drawings and photos down to the location of individual trees.
We also would like to thank John, Joel and Josh Garzoli at San Rafael's
Garzoli Gallery for allowing the use of several paintings from their historical
California collection, one of which is shown on the Underwriters page
of this website.
On the funding front, Wells Fargo Bank and NOAA's National Marine Fisheries
Service confirmed commitments as new underwriters for the series and we
are in advanced discussions with several other prospective funders but
still not fully funded yet.
06/07/07
Welcome to our new website! Here you will find periodic updates as to
progress on production, funding and distribution. We are working
to complete "picture-lock", meaning the entire series is set
except for technical adjustments such as color correction, audio sweetening
and preparing the programs for broadcast. We are in the midst of
editing, dropping in music tracks and selecting from hundreds and hundreds
of historic images -- 400-500 will ultimately be used in the series.