Adam Sadowsky How to engineer a viral music video

Hi there.

I’m going to be talking a little bit about

music, machines and life.

Or, more specifically,

what we learned from the creation of a very large and complicated machine

for a music video.

Some of you may recognize this image.

This is the opening frame of the video that we created.

We’ll be showing the video at the end,

but before we do, I want to talk a little bit about

what it is that they wanted.

Now, when we first started talking to OK Go –

the name of the song is “This Too Shall Pass” –

we were really excited because

they expressed interest in building a machine that they could dance with.

And we were very excited about this

because, of course,

they have a history of dancing with machines.

They’re responsible for this video, “Here It Goes Again.”

50-million-plus views on YouTube.

Four guys dancing on treadmills,

no cuts, just a static camera.

A fantastically viral and wonderful video.

So we were really excited about working with them.

And we sort of started talking about what it is that they wanted.

And they explained that they wanted

kind of a Rube Goldberg machine.

Now, for those of you who don’t know,

a Rube Goldberg machine

is a complicated contraption,

an incredibly over-engineered piece of machinery

that accomplishes a relatively simple task.

So we were excited by this idea,

and we started talking about

exactly what it would look like.

And we came up with some parameters, because,

you know, building a Rube Goldberg machine

has limitations,

but it also is pretty wide open.

And we wanted to make sure that we did something

that would work for a music video.

So we came up with a list of requirements,

the “10 commandments,”

and they were, in order of ascending difficulty:

The first is “No magic.”

Everything that happened on screen had to be

very easily understood by a typical viewer.

The rule of thumb was that, if my mother couldn’t understand it,

then we couldn’t use it in the video.

They wanted band integration,

that is, the machine acting upon the band members,

specifically not the other way around.

They wanted the machine action to follow the song feeling.

So as the song picks up emotion,

so should the machine

get grander in its process.

They wanted us to make use of the space.

So we have this 10,000-square-foot warehouse we were using,

divided between two floors.

It included an exterior loading dock.

We used all of that, including a giant hole in the floor

that we actually descended the camera and cameraman through.

They wanted it messy, and we were happy to oblige.

The machine itself would start the music.

So the machine would get started,

it would travel some distance,

reacting along the way,

hit play on an iPod or a tape deck

or something that would start playback.

And the machine would maintain synchronization throughout.

And speaking of synchronization,

they wanted it to sync to the rhythm

and to hit specific beats along the way.

Okay. (Laughter)

They wanted it to end precisely on time.

Okay, so now the start to finish timing has to be perfect.

And they wanted the music to drop out

at a certain point in the video

and actual live audio from the machine

to play part of the song.

And as if that wasn’t enough,

all of these incredibly complicating things, right,

they wanted it in one shot.

(Laughter)

(Applause)

Okay.

So, just some statistics

about what we went through in the process.

The machine itself has

89 distinct interactions.

It took us 85 takes

to get it on film

to our satisfaction.

Of those 85 takes,

only three actually successfully completed their run.

We destroyed two pianos

and 10 televisions in the process.

We went to Home Depot well over a hundred times.

(Laughter)

And we lost one high-heeled shoe

when one of our engineers, Heather Knight,

left her high-heeled shoe – after a nice dinner,

and returned back to the build –

and left it in a pile of stuff.

And another engineer thought, “Well, that would be a really good thing to use”

and ended up using it as a really nice trigger.

And it’s actually in the machine.

So what did we learn from all of this?

Well, having completed this,

we have the opportunity to step back and reflect

on some of the things.

And we learned that small stuff stinks.

Little balls in wooden tracks

are really susceptible to

humidity and temperature and a little bit of dust,

and they fall out of the tracks,

the exact angles makes it hard to get right.

And yet, a bowling ball will always follow the same path.

It doesn’t matter what temperature it is,

doesn’t matter what’s in its way;

it will pretty much get where it needs to go.

But as much as the small stuff stinks, we needed somewhere to start,

so that we would have somewhere to go.

And so you have to start with it. You have to focus on it.

Small stuff stinks,

but, of course, it’s essential, right?

What else? Planning is incredibly important.

(Laughter)

You know, we spent a lot of time ideating

and even building some of these things.

It’s been said that, “No battle plan

survives contact with the enemy.”

I think our enemy was physics –

(Laughter)

and she’s a cruel mistress.

Often, we had to pull things out as a result

because of timing or aesthetics or whatever.

And so while planning is important, so is flexibility.

These are all things that ended up

not making it into the final machine.

So also, put reliable stuff last,

the stuff that’s going to run every time.

Again, small to large is relevant here.

The little Lego car in the beginning of the video

references the big, real car

near the end of the video.

The big, real car works every time; there’s no problem about it.

The little one had a tendency to try to run off the track

and that’s a problem.

But you don’t want to have to reset the whole machine

because the Lego car at the end doesn’t work, right.

So you put that up front so that, if it fails,

at least you know

you don’t have to reset the whole thing.

Life can be

messy.

There were incredibly difficult moments in the building of this thing.

Months were spent in this tiny, cold warehouse.

And the wonderful elation that we had

when we finally completed it.

So it’s important to remember that whether it’s good or it’s bad,

“This Too Shall Pass.”

Thank you very much.

(Applause)

And now to introduce

their music video,

we have OK Go.

OK Go: An introduction. Hello TEDxUSC.

We are OK Go.

What are we doing? Oh, just hanging out with our Grammy. What what!

It think we can do better than this. Hello TEDxUSC.

We are OK Go. Have you read the “Natural Curiosity Cabinet?”

I mean, “Curiosity” – excuse me.

Let me start again.

We need some more ridiculous things besides “The Cabinet of Natural Curiosities.”

Tim’s sundial hat.

Have you seen the new work they’ve done to the Waltz Towers?

Sorry, start again.

(Barking)

Dogs.

Hello, TEDxUSC. We are OK Go,

and this our new video, “This Too Shall Pass.”

[unclear]

Kay, we can still do one better I think, yeah.

That one’s pretty good. It’s getting better.

(Music)

♫ You know you can’t keep letting it get you down ♫

♫ And you can’t keep dragging that dead weight around ♫

♫ If there ain’t all that much to lug around ♫

♫ Better run like hell when you hit the ground ♫

♫ When the morning comes ♫

♫ When the morning comes ♫

♫ You can’t stop these kids from dancing ♫

♫ Why would you want to? ♫

♫ Especially when you’re already getting yours ♫

♫ Cuz if your mind don’t move and your knees don’t bend ♫

♫ Well don’t go blaming the kids again ♫

♫ When the morning comes ♫

♫ When the morning comes ♫

♫ When the morning comes ♫

♫ When the morning comes ♫

♫ When the morning comes ♫

♫ When the morning comes ♫

♫ Let it go ♫

♫ This too shall pass ♫

♫ Let it go ♫

♫ This too shall pass ♫

♫ You know you can’t keep letting it get you down ♫

♫ No, you can’t keep letting it get you down ♫

♫ Let it go ♫

♫ This too shall pass ♫

♫ When the morning comes ♫

♫ When the morning comes ♫

♫ When the morning comes ♫

♫ When the morning comes ♫

(Cheering)

你好呀。

我将谈谈

音乐、机器和生活。

或者,更具体地说,

我们从为音乐视频创建一个非常大而复杂的机器中学到了什么

你们中的一些人可能会认出这张图片。

这是我们创建的视频的开始帧。

我们将在最后播放视频,

但在此之前,我想谈谈

他们想要什么。

现在,当我们第一次开始与 OK Go 交谈时——

这首歌的名字是“This Too Shall Pass”——

我们真的很兴奋,

因为他们表示有兴趣制造一台可以与之共舞的机器。

我们对此感到非常兴奋,

因为当然,

他们有与机器共舞的历史。

他们负责制作这个视频,“又来了。”

YouTube 上的观看次数超过 5000 万次。

四个人在跑步机上跳舞,

没有剪裁,只有一个静态摄像机。

一个非常具有病毒性和精彩的视频。

所以我们对与他们合作感到非常兴奋。

我们开始谈论他们想要什么。

他们解释说他们想要

一种 Rube Goldberg 机器。

现在,对于那些不知道的人来说

,Rube Goldberg 机器

是一个复杂的装置,

一个完成相对简单任务的令人难以置信的过度设计的机器

所以我们对这个想法很兴奋

,我们开始讨论

它的样子。

我们提出了一些参数,因为,

你知道,建造 Rube Goldberg 机器

有局限性,

但它也非常开放。

我们想确保我们做了一些

适合音乐视频的事情。

因此,我们提出了一系列要求,

即“10 条诫命”

,它们是按难度升序排列的

:第一条是“没有魔法”。

屏幕上发生的一切都必须

非常容易被普通观众理解。

经验法则是,如果我妈妈听不懂

,我们就不能在视频中使用它。

他们想要乐队整合

,即机器作用于乐队成员

,而不是相反。

他们希望机器动作跟随歌曲的感觉。

所以当歌曲唤起情感时,

机器也应该

在它的过程中变得更宏大。

他们希望我们利用这个空间。

所以我们有这个我们正在使用的 10,000 平方英尺的仓库,

分为两层。

它包括一个外部装卸码头。

我们使用了所有这些,包括地板上的一个大洞

,我们实际上是让相机和摄影师穿过它。

他们希望它凌乱,我们很乐意效劳。

机器本身会启动音乐。

所以机器会启动,

它会移动一段距离,

沿途做出反应,

在 iPod 或磁带卡座上

播放,或者其他会开始播放的东西。

机器将始终保持同步。

说到同步,

他们希望它与节奏同步,

并在此过程中击中特定的节拍。

好的。 (笑声)

他们希望它准时结束。

好的,所以现在开始到结束的时间必须是完美的。

他们希望音乐

在视频

和机器的实际现场音频中的某个点退出,

以播放歌曲的一部分。

好像这还不够,

所有这些非常复杂的事情,对,

他们想要一口气完成。

(笑声)

(掌声)

好的。

所以,只是一些

关于我们在这个过程中经历的统计数据。

机器本身有

89 种不同的交互。

我们花了 85

次拍摄才让

我们满意。

在这 85 次拍摄中,

只有 3 次真正成功完成了跑步。

在此过程中,我们摧毁了两架钢琴和 10 台电视机。

我们去了家得宝一百多次。

(笑声)

当我们的一位工程师,Heather Knight

离开她的高跟鞋时,我们丢失了一只高跟鞋——在一顿丰盛的晚餐后

,回到建筑

——把它留在一堆东西里。

另一位工程师认为,“嗯,这将是一个非常好的使用”,

并最终将它用作一个非常好的触发器。

它实际上在机器中。

那么我们从这一切中学到了什么?

好吧,完成了这个,

我们有机会退后一步,

反思一些事情。

我们了解到,小东西很臭。

木制轨道

上的小球真的很容易受到

湿度和温度以及一点点灰尘的影响

,它们会从轨道上掉下来

,精确的角度很难找到正确的方向。

然而,保龄球将始终遵循相同的路径。

不管它是什么温度,

不管它的方式是什么;

它几乎会到达它需要去的地方。

但尽管小东西很臭,我们需要从某个地方开始,

这样我们就有地方去。

所以你必须从它开始。 你必须专注于它。

小东西很臭,

但是,当然,它是必不可少的,对吧?

还有什么? 计划非常重要。

(笑声)

你知道,我们花了很多时间构思

甚至构建其中的一些东西。

有人说,“没有任何作战计划能

在与敌人的接触中幸存下来。”

我认为我们的敌人是物理学——

(笑声

)她是个残忍的情妇。

通常,由于时间或美学或其他原因,我们不得不把事情拉出来

因此,虽然规划很重要,但灵活性也很重要。

这些都是最终

没有进入最终机器的东西。

同样,把可靠的东西放在最后

,每次都会运行的东西。

同样,从小到大在这里是相关的。

视频开头的小乐高汽车

参考

了视频结尾附近的大型真实汽车。

大而真实的汽车每次都能工作; 没有问题。

小家伙有试图跑出赛道的倾向

,这是一个问题。

但是你不想

因为最后的乐高汽车不工作而不得不重置整台机器,对吧。

所以你把它放在前面,这样,如果它失败了,

至少你知道

你不必重置整个事情。

生活可能很

混乱。

在建造这个东西的过程中有非常困难的时刻。

在这个又小又冷的仓库里呆了几个月。

当我们最终完成它时,我们感到非常高兴。

所以重要的是要记住,无论是好是

坏,“这也将过去”。

非常感谢你。

(掌声

)现在介绍

他们的音乐录影带,

我们有OK Go。

OK Go:介绍。 你好,TEDxUSC。

我们可以去。

我们在做什么? 哦,只是和我们的格莱美一起出去玩。 什么什么!

它认为我们可以做得比这更好。 你好,TEDxUSC。

我们可以去。 你读过“自然好奇柜”吗?

我的意思是,“好奇”——对不起。

让我重新开始。

除了“自然奇观”之外,我们还需要一些更荒谬的东西。

蒂姆的日晷帽。

你看过他们为华尔兹塔所做的新工作吗?

对不起,重新开始。

(吠叫)

狗。

你好,TEDxUSC。 我们没问题

,这是我们的新视频,“这也将过去”。

[不清楚]

凯,我认为我们仍然可以做得更好,是的。

那个还不错 它越来越好。

(音乐)

♫你知道你不能一直让它让你失望♫♫

而且你不能一直拖着沉重的重量

♫♫如果没有那么多

东西可以拖着♫♫当你 撞到地上♫

♫ 早晨来临时♫

♫ 早晨来临时♫

♫ 你不能阻止这些孩子跳舞♫

♫ 你为什么要这样做? ♫

♫ 尤其是当你已经得到你的时候♫

♫ 因为如果你的思想不动,膝盖不弯曲♫

♫ 好吧,不要再责怪孩子了♫

♫ 早上来的时候♫

♫ 早上来的时候 ♫

♫ 黎明来临♫

♫ 黎明来临♫

♫ 黎明来临♫

♫ 黎明来临♫

♫ 让它过去♫

♫ 这也会过去♫

♫ 让它过去♫

♫ 这也会过去♫

♫ 你知道 你不能一直让它让你失望♫

♫ 不,你不能一直让它让你失望♫

♫ 放手♫

♫ 这也会过去的♫

♫ 早上来的时候♫

♫ 早上来的时候♫

♫ 什么时候 早晨来了♫

♫ 早晨来了♫

(欢呼)