5 minutes with… Jamie Matson PD / Edit producer
May 3, 2012 @ 2:10 pm Posted in News CommentsI’ve been a PD for over twelve years, working on a wide range of different productions from ob-doc to archive, and I’ve filmed in variety of different locations from fishing boats to prison cells. A personal highlight was following the “puppy police” as they deliver justice to the animal mistreaters of the Bronx.
After many years as a typical production nomad, with stints in London, new York and Liverpool, 4 years ago I decided with my family to move to west Cornwall. My six year old daughter now wouldn’t want to leave and while maintaining a career in what is a very London centric industry requires a bit of juggling, the promise of good surf and even better pasties makes it all worthwhile.
I’m relatively new to media parents but the idea of short term contracts and flexible work patterns fits with my own lifestyle.
The first series of World’s Greatest/Scariest was my first job through Media Parents. I edit produced World’s Greatest Daredevils in series 1 and enjoyed it so much I was very happy to return as PD on World’s Scariest Flights in Series 2 following its immediate recommission.A second series brings with it a fresh set of challenges. The format and shape of the series has been bedded down, but the bar has been raised interms of the quality and strength of the stories featured. Several weeks of searching through the archives for just the right content was to follow, searching through hours of aviation accidents as a few themes began to emerge, and if the main message coming though as this stage was to avoid flying on second hand Russian cargo planes in tropical storms then that at least was something…
It’s a demanding and complex series, with four episodes shot on three continents, and it requires a large amount of cross over and trust between the teams of PDs and APs. My own episode featured material shot in Florida, New york, Michigan, Amsterdam, London and Tokyo by five different PDs (Media Parents talent Zoe Fryer, Jim Shreim, Phil Broadhurst and Jules Seymour) but, thanks to the close collaboration between teams, it all cut together seamlessly.
All I had to do now was not to let the material itself turn me into a nervous flyer and all would be well. The inference of our show is that despite the high drama and jeopardy of the incidents we feature there’s always some chance for survival. It’s a reassuring message, in amongst the screams and explosions of the material I had been viewing and editing, so I was able to sit back and enjoy my daytrip to Amsterdam to interview the survivors of a hot air balloon crash. Though I did have my camera phone ready, just in case…
It was an enjoyable, and enlightening, series to work on. I hope you enjoy watching it, and remember, please pay attention to the inflight safety briefing.
http://www.mediaparents.co.uk/freelancers/2904/jamie-matson