Archives for category: Personal

“Through this journey, there was a lot of resistance. Understanding the Korean culture… we know that for both of our parents, it was a huge jump for them to actually be supportive of this. I don’t think many parents, especially of the Asian decent, would be supportive of this.” 

JT and Grace Park shared these words with us about their parents just over a year ago. It’s remarkable how much can change in such a short span of time.

Above: Grace’s Father, Young Hwan Lee, back in the day.

If you’ve been following our blog, you’ll remember that about a year ago, the Parks adopted a baby boy from Korea named Joel, and welcomed him into their family. [See our previous blogpost we are the the park family 5 | homecoming]

Before long, they were moved in their hearts adopt another child from Korea, and began the process of bringing Sarah into their family. In the midst of the process, some challenges arose.

According to the South Korean Ministry of Health and Welfare, There are currently 20,000 children in South Korea waiting to be adopted. Of these children, many have special needs, and their hopes are bleak for one day finding a forever family. [Of special needs children in South Korea, only 1.5% are adopted by Korean citizens via domestic adoption.]

Despite these numbers, and due in part to pressure from anti-adoption groups, there are now restrictions impacting all international adoptions. A quota has been established, drastically limiting the number of children that can be adopted internationally.

Above (from left): Joel, Anna, and Timothy Park

In light of this news, and in the midst of their second adoption process, JT and Grace approached us to help create a video for the Voice of Love Campaign, whose sole focus is advocating on behalf of orphaned children in South Korea.

Composed of Koreans, Korean-Americans, American churches and ministries, adoptees and their families, and friends all over the world—Voice of Love is brought together by one goal: restoring the futures of waiting children and reminding South Korea that adoption is a beautiful thing.

As with all of our films, we aimed to create a meaningful and visually rich story. Having filmed the Homecoming video for the Parks and experiencing their heart of love for their baby boy, Joel, we knew we couldn’t pass up an opportunity to tell their family’s ongoing story.

We felt that the strongest angle we could take with this piece would be to hear a testimony from someone who changed his mind along the way–Grace’s father. It was remarkable to hear him speak about his family, especially understanding that just over a year ago, his perspective was much different.

In the end, we hoped to create something that everyone could watch–not just those involved in the adoption community, but a film for everyone to enjoy, and hopefully share.

This is Young Hwan Lee, and this is his story.

Cheers,

Chris


If you’ve been following this series, you know that the stage has been set for a season finale of epic proportions. When The Walking Dead premiered back in 2010, I don’t think anyone anticipated what was coming. Here was a show that dealt with a dystopian world, overrun by zombies–a familiar plot line seen in countless and unabashedly cheesy movies.

What set this show apart, though, was the treatment from film director, Frank Darabont [Shawshank Redemption, The Green Mile]. The show has a very cinematic quality, never feeling at all like a TV show.  The show also succeeds where ‘zombie movies’ typically fail–the characters are actually developed so that you care about them.

Earlier this year, at the start of the show’s second season, AMC held a contest to create a trailer for the show. The winning trailer would air during the mid-season finale. I decided to enter on a whim.


Cutting this trailer together was no easy feat. For starters, I had to choose from 118 clips, 6 different song tracks, 4 title cards, and use the editing software they provided–not having the freedom of Final Cut or Premiere was a really big setback.

The biggest challenge though, wasn’t the tools. The biggest challenge was setting myself apart from the rest of the entries. I had to create something that would do justice to the cinematic feel of the show. Instead of going the super obvious route–choosing some creepy music, or featuring a load of zombies and violence–I thought to create some mystery.

I chose a slower song, focused on the protagonist of the show, chose key moments of dialogue, hinted at the threat, and ended the trailer without a character even firing a single shot.

I was pretty proud of what I produced and thought it had a fair shot. Here is the final product. I called it, The Sound of God Laughing.

Out of over 10,000 entires, my trailer steadily climbed from no place to the Top 10 in the popular vote. I was pretty stoked to see it climb the charts. But what mattered in the end was the opinion of AMC’s Judges Panel.

In November, I got a phone call from New York…from an AMC representative. “Congratulations, Mr. Sotelo. I’m calling to let you know that you won the trailer contest for AMC’s The Walking Dead”.

Silence. Then shock. Then contained excitement while I jumped up and down as she explained what would go on from there.  A few weeks later, the trailer made its debut on national TV.

Here is the extra special EPIC version with our reaction to its live premiere . Between you and me, this one is a lot more fun :)

It was loads of fun participating in this contest and honestly, it was an amazing feeling being recognized for my editing work. Having been editing since 9 years old, it was a very meaningful moment for me. A huge thanks to everyone who voted and watched the trailer. A big thank you to the Judges Panel for choosing my trailer to be the big winner. And lastly, thank you, Mr. Famous AMC announcer, for saying my name correctly on television. You made entering this contest totally worth it.

Cheers,

Chris

Disclaimer: *We DO NOT own the rights to this trailer*
ALL Rights belong to AMC and The Walking Dead*

amctv.com
amctv.com/shows/the-walking-dead

AMC’s blog post:
blogs.amctv.com/the-walking-dead/2012/01/video-the-walking-dead-mashup-trailer-winner.php

Elsinore is one of our favorite bands to listen to. Not just because they’re local to Champaign–and we love supporting all things local–but because there’s an organic honesty to their music.

Currently, the band is hard at work in the studio producing their latest EP, “Life Inside an Elephant”. The band’s lead vocalist, Ryan Groff, has also been working the live performance route, so if you’re lucky you may be able to catch the magic at the local watering hole near you.

We had the great fortune of catching Ryan perform at Cream & Flutter [formerly Cakes on Walnut] during an Arts Festival in Champaign. This was one of those “hey it’s nice out so let’s grab something sweet and listen to music/why not do an impromptu recording?” type moments.

As their music continues to shift, change, and take shape, the excitement builds for “The Elephant” to arrive. In the meantime, grab a cool drink and take a listen to Ryan’s acoustic version of a couple of songs from their upcoming album. For your viewing pleasure, here is “The Thermostat The Telephone” + “Ultraviolence”.

Cheers,

Chris

Kudos to Peter John Catanus for taking the lead on this shoot + edit :]

In the midst of editing our queue of weddings, I often find myself taking breaks and doing a variety of things for inspiration’s sake.

I pop DVD’s in and watch favorite movie scenes, listen to music, go for a walk, or rewatch the last 10 minutes of the LOST series finale. Just recently, I’ve taken to drawing inspiration from editing little personal vignettes.

That’s right. I take a break from editing by editing.

I’ve been sitting on this one since I got back from Italy. Putting it together, however, has definitely proven to open up that channel of creativity.

Nothing can do justice to the breathtaking beauty of Italy–its people, sights, sounds, sunflowers, and yawning dogs–but I hope you somehow and in some way, end up inspired.

Cheers,

Chris