Mitch Jacobson Explained

Mitch Jacobson
Birth Place:Chicago, Illinois
Occupation:Producer/director
Video editor
Educator
Years Active:1984–present

Mitch Jacobson (born 1963) is an American producer/director, video editor and educator specializing in multi-camera production.

Early life and education

Jacobson attended the film program at the University of South Florida in Tampa, Florida. He then worked at a public access television station in Tampa, and as a freelance director/cameraman for a decade.[1]

Career

Multi-camera editing

Jacobson is an editor who has cut feature-length concert films and short-form publicity programs for numerous musicians including the Rolling Stones, Aerosmith, Paul McCartney and U2.[2] [3] He has produced and directed NFL and MLB programming for Fox Sports Channel, and edited comedy, music and awards shows for MTV.[3] [4] Paul McCartney Live In St. Petersburg, which he edited, was nominated for a 2006 Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Variety, Music or Comedy Special,[4] and it was featured on the DVD Paul McCartney Live in Red Square, which won the MIPCOM Award for best music DVD of the Year.[5] Paul McCartney: The Space Within Us is the largest multi-camera show Jacobson has edited, with 26 unique camera angles.[1] He has also edited for numerous television shows, including Great Performances on PBS from 2008 to 2010,[1] the Montel Williams Show from 2007 to 2008,[6] America's Got Talent season 7 on NBC in 2012,[7] Nick Cannon Presents: Wild 'N Out on MTV2 in 2013, and The Wendy Williams Show since 2011.[8]

He is the owner of Category Five Studios, a creative editing and color boutique in New York City,[2] [9] and a member of the Motion Pictures Editors Guild.[10]

Teaching

Jacobson is an Apple Certified Pro and trainer for the NewTek TriCaster multi-camera production system. He specializes in Avid, Final Cut Pro, Adobe Premiere Pro and NewTek TriCaster systems.[3] [4] [11] He regularly presents multi-camera live stream, editing, directing and encoding workshops called StreamCamp across the US, for industry trade groups and conferences.[3] [7] [9] In 2011, he began hosting Cutting It Close, a live web talk show for editors.[9]

Jacobson's textbook Mastering MultiCamera Techniques was published by Focal Press in 2010. Intended for producers, directors and editors, it has information on multi-camera productions from a 2-camera interview to a 26-camera concert, and includes a DVD tutorial with multiple angle concert footage from Paul McCartney and Elton John.[6] [10] [12] The book's foreword was written by Academy Award-winning editor Thomas A. Ohanian, formerly of Avid Technology.[10] [13]

Filmography

Television

Concert films

Bibliography

Books

Articles

External links

Notes and References

  1. Rob Feld, “Concertmaster,” Editors Guild Magazine, volume 30, number 3, May–June 2009.
  2. Mitch Jacobson, “Multicam Madness!” Creative COW, 2010.
  3. http://www.telestream.net/pdfs/customer-case-studies/cas-Mitch-Jacobson-Category5-Entertainment.pdf “Mitch Jacobson Deploys Telestream Pipeline for Quick Turnaround Multi-cam Edit While Ingest,”
  4. http://sportsvideo.org/main/summit-2013/?p=3868 “SVG Summit,”
  5. http://www.idmadvda.org/content/view/21/1/ “2005 MIPCOM DVD Awards Winners Announced,”
  6. Scott Simmons, “Master Multicamera Techniques is a must have book for editors,” Pro Video Coalition, October 8, 2010.
  7. Amy Cassell, “Digital Cinematography Program Hosts Multicamp Workshop,” Full Sail Blog, November 8, 2012.
  8. http://events.tekserve.com/event/meet-the-experts-a-video-production-evening-with-mitch-jacobson-jennifer-lee-michael-artsis-brian-budak-and-matthew-mallinson/ “Meet the Experts,”
  9. http://digital.copcomm.com/i/40055/41 “The master becomes the student,”
  10. Ray Zone, “Cut/Print,” CineMontage, March 2012.
  11. http://tv.adobe.com/watch/adobe-at-nab-2013/improve-your-workflows-improve-your-skills-get-certified-on-adobe-premiere-pro/ “Improve Your Workflows, Improve Your Skills,”
  12. Jan Ozer, “Multicam Editing in Final Cut Pro,” Streaming Learning Center, June 1, 2010.
  13. Nick T. Spark, “Stepping Out from Behind the Curtain,” The Motion Picture Editors Guild Newsletter, Vol. 20, No. 2, March/April 1999.