Posts Tagged ‘Episode’

CE Pro of the Week: Brad Sundberg, BSUN Media Systems

Monday, August 2nd, 2010 by BSUN Media Systems

He describes the wildest installation requests ever. Think Michael Jackson, Madonna and rattlesnakes.

By Tom LeBlanc
Originally Published: July 30, 2010

Brad Sundberg - Owner of BSUN Media Systems

Brad Sundberg, owner, BSUN Media Systems

Each week, we aim to provide an informative – yet colorful – profile of one of your fellow CE pros. Interested in being featured yourself? See below.

How would you use Twitter to describe what your company does (140 character limit)?

Quality audio and video still matter to me. Like a great recipe, you can’t go wrong with great ingredients and a lot of experience.

After you complete a project, what do you think your typical client tells his friend about the experience?

I hope it is something like what Lucy Buffett [Jimmy’s sister] wrote after the work we did for her restaurant Lulu’s on Alabama’s Gulf shore:

“I humbly applaud Brad with a vociferous BRAVO BRAVO! Thank you for the absolutely impeccable job and rising to the occasion! You now are entitled to ‘gumbo for life.’

“Last January, we decided to upgrade our audio-visual program and somehow found Brad! He did an expert job and was always willing to work cheerfully and diligently especially when we would ‘make it up as we go’ — a LuLu’s trademark.

“Food and beverage establishments underestimate the importance of the quality of ambient music. We are hyper vigilant about how our music communicates an exceptional experience, especially since we have live entertainment every night of the year. It absolutely delights me to walk around the entire restaurant and property and to enjoy quality sound.

“I am completely confident in saying the quality of our audio-visual system actually increases my sales and makes a major contribution to the overall success of LuLu’s.”

What can CE pros learn from your company to make them think differently and run their business better?

When I built my Los Angeles office I spent a lot of money on a showroom. I had motorization, lighting control, top-of-the-line everything from cabinetry to carpet.

And guess what? No one came to it.

People are busy and are not likely to carve out 90 minutes to come sit in your showroom. I did 95 percent of my sales in my clients’ homes and offices, bringing key pieces with me. When I opened the Fairhope location I refined this concept into what I call a “portable showroom.”

I bring CrestronSpeakerCraft and Kaleidescape into potential client’s homes and let them try it for a few days on their schedule. I also bring it to architect, interior design and real estate offices for trainings. This approach builds a deeper trust and friendship with my clients because I am on their turf, not the other way around.

What trade tip can you offer your fellow CE pros?

Stay in touch with your client base. Write a newsletter, email them or call them periodically. And don’t take yourself or your products too seriously.

What’s the wildest request you’ve ever had for an installation?

That’s a tough one. I built all of the music and video systems for Michael Jackson’s Neverland Valley Ranch, plus did extensive work for Madonna, Tom Cruise, Elizabeth Taylor and Quincy Jones.

I have put music on bumper cars, horse drawn carriages, a steam train, a Gulf Stream jet and three custom motor coaches.

I have built a one-of-a-kind whole-house baby monitor for a celebrity in Brentwood, Calif.

I have built a fully mobile recording studio in rack cases for a touring musical artist.

I’ve folded TVs into ceilings, built a home with 60 zones of music control, even built a trio of matched recording studios in California, France and England for a producer with three homes.

And just last month we floated a 33-foot HDTV on barge for a secret Jimmy Buffett concert.

But perhaps the “wildest” was to provide a complete narrative and sound effect system for a snake barn. We recorded the narration off-site, but had to complete the installation above, below and around the snake enclosures with the snakes in them. I am not afraid of snakes, but being on a mechanic’s creeper in the dark, installing a speaker below a cage of perhaps 25 rattlesnakes (we had a microphone in the cage so guests could hear the rattles through the glass) sort of stands out in my mind as being out of the ordinary.

What is your 3D strategy and do you think the technology will live up to the hype?

I may lose my CE Pro ribbon for this, but I am totally bored of 3D. I have no interest in it; I consider it gimmicky; and in the past 12 months I would estimate that only one of my clients has even mentioned 3D. Her comment was how much she would hate to have to wear glasses to watch TV.

As far as a strategy, if my clients want to play 8-track tapes through speakers in their swimming pool, I will make it happen. Likewise if they ask for 3D, 3D they will get … but I am not promoting either one.

What is your absolute favorite piece of audio demo material?

Quincy Jones’ “The Places You Find Love.”

In my previous overlapping career, I was a technical director on several major albums including Jones’ Back On The Block. When you work on a song like “Places” in the studio for 16 months, you get a pretty good idea of how it should sound, and that comes in very handy when I tune systems.

My good friend Bruce Swedien bent the meters on that song. It goes from a whisper to scream and back to a whisper. Huge drums, huge bass, huge choir, Chaka and Siedah vocals with Quincy driving the train! That makes for a big song.

My other go-to song is “Secret Silken World” by David Baerwald. It is dark and warm and masterfully recorded.

What is your absolute favorite piece of video demo material?

I am such a dork with my video demos. Most CE Pro readers will dismiss me right now.

I don’t like loud explosions with trucks and body parts flying over my head. (Neither do most of my female clients, and they often control the checkbook.) For rich colors I show Finding Nemo. For a jaw-dropping scene I show Step Into Liquid where they surf 66-foot waves 100 miles off the coast of California. I have never played that scene without people stopping what they are doing and just staring at it in disbelief.

What is something most people don’t know about you?

When I was about nine years old my dad gave me a box of wires, batteries, motors, switches, buzzers and electronic parts for Christmas. It was the best gift ever, and I was hooked. Thanks again, Dad.

Michael Jackson, Madonna, Quincy Jones

Michael Jackson, Madonna and Quincy Jones are on Brad Sundberg’s past clients list.
Originally published at: http://www.cepro.com/article/ce_pro_of_the_week_brad_sundberg_bsun_media_systems/

Jimmy Buffett Performs on ‘World’s Largest’ Mobile HD LED Screen

Saturday, July 24th, 2010 by BSUN Media Systems

Integrator accommodates last-minute request, using barge to display the 33-foot screen for beachfront audience.

By Tom LeBlanc

July 23, 2010
Jimmy Buffett is a big act.

His sister, Lucy Buffett, owner of famed LuLu’s at HomePort Marina Restaurant on Alabama’s Gulf shore, is a big custom electronics client.

So when LuLu’s wants a Jimmy Buffett concert simulcast on a big screen, the integrator had better find the biggest screen available.

That was the task at hand for Fairhope, Ala.-based BSUN Media Systems when it set out to display the simulcast of a Jimmy Buffett charity concert benefiting victims of the BP oil spill.

BSUN, which had installed about 80 Episode speakers, 16 zones of Crestron automation and 10 Zektor-switchable HDTVs at LuLu’s, was asked to quickly procure the “largest JumboTron” available, says owner Brad Sundberg.

Sundberg called Argyle, Texas-based GoVision, which was able to deliver GoBigger, what it calls “the world’s largest mobile high-definition LED screen,” within a few days. BSUN and GoVision technicians floated the 19-foot by 33-foot unit on a barge just off the dock near LuLu’s.

Check out photos of the concert and LuLu’s installation.

“We put the screen on a barge – no small feat – and had a tugboat pull the giant truck-mounted screen on the barge up to the dock at LuLu’s,” Sundberg says. “I ordered another pair of Zektor video extenders, and in no time I had the world’s largest HDTV connected to the LuLu’s video infrastructure, as if it had been there all along.”

The kicker is that the Buffett concert was canceled due to tropical storm Alex. However, since LuLu’s patrons were already buzzing about the concert – and the owner happens to have some connections – it was determined that the show would go on.

Sundberg explains how he scrambled to accommodate the request:

“Around 10 a.m. on June 30 I was informed that Buffett [and his Coral Reefer Band] would indeed be performing a live show that night on the beach at LuLu’s, and we had to use the video switcher in the GoVision truck for camera feeds.

“Four HD cameras and crew were brought in, improved stage lighting was quickly installed, and the endless video and audio tests from cameras to control booth (in a truck on a barge!) were underway. By show time, we had a clean HD feed from the cameras to the barge to the 33-foot JumboTron, then through the Zektor extenders to my A/V room at LuLu’s, where they were distributed via Zektor to the 10 TVs connected to the system.

“Likewise I took a stereo mix from the front of house console, compressed it to protect my speakers, and distributed it among the more than 80 speakers around the property at LuLu’s. Keep in the mind, the video had to travel perhaps 500’ feet from the cameras to the switcher and the first Zektor, then 700 feet over Cat 5e, then convert back to analog to feed into the Prowler, then another distance (200 to 500 feet) to the various TVs, and again convert to RGB for each display.

“I was amazed at the quality of the picture after all of that. While it was a lot of work, I am happy to report everything came together without a hitch.”

About 2,500 people attended the impromptu concert and Sundberg says the screen was visible from a quarter-mile away.

The planned charity concert happened on July 11, about a mile from LuLu’s and was simulcast to the restaurant on a 9-foot by 16-foot screen because GoBigger was already booked.

New Products Menu – April 2010

Thursday, April 22nd, 2010 by Brad Sundberg - BSUN Media

pee wee with iPad

Call It A Surgical Flamethrower


The Panasonic 4000U projector has been upgraded to a staggering 100,000:1 contrast ratio, throwing a true 1080p picture on the screen at 1600 lumens of brightness.  These kinds of numbers were unheard of just a few years ago, and at a pricepoint of less than $2500, this can be the centerpiece a of true home theater.  Football season is coming…



Screen TestDragonfly screen


The Dragonfly 100″ high contrast motorized screen is the perfect solution for a theater that can’t always be a theater.  Dragonfly offers fixed, motorized and tab-tensioned motorized screens in a variety of sizes.  Motorized models start in the $1000 price range, with tab-tensioned being roughly double that, depending on size, finish, etc.  Another great product from Dragonfly!

Episode 650Music To My Ears

I have been a fan of Episode loudspeakers since my first audition, and I applaud their dedication to great sound at a fair price. The HT-650LCR offers features like a 4.5″ ribbon for silky smooth high frequencies, and dual 6.5″ woven carbon fiber woofers. I have heard and used a lot of speakers, but the open sound and attention to sonic detail in the HT-650 is awesome. If you have not heard ribbon speakers before, you owe it to yourself to hear what you have been missing. I own a pair for my personal use, and proudly recommend them to my clients, friends and family. While something like a front port may not be noticed by some, it makes a huge difference when you mount them in a cabinet or on a bookcase. I encourage you to give us a call for your own demo, because at $1600/pr, these are a great bargain in the world of high quality speakers for music and movies. Audio legend Tom Jung wrote a solid review on the 650’s, in case you need a second opinion. Great sounding speakers are alive and well at Episode!


Who’s In Control?Prodigy Remote


Crestron is now shipping their new Prodigy Control System with handheld touchpanel. This has the look, solid feel and control capabilities worthy of the Crestron name.  Additionally, Crestron is supporting it with a complete line of light dimmers and switches, climate control thermostats, keypads, whole house music distribution, even an iPod interface.

Like all good things, this is not the cheapest remote on the block, starting at just over $1100 for the remote and processor kit, plus programming. But once you see for yourself the quality that Crestron put into it before they finally released it, you will understand why they are the leaders in control system technology. Give us a call to see a Crestron Prodigy yourself.


Firestone RieslingTake The
Party Outside!


OK, I know what you are about to say.  “Brad, that rock speaker looks fake… almost silly.”  Maybe you didn’t say silly, but you were thinking it.  And you would be right if it were sitting on your living room floor, but THAT would be silly.  Here’s the thing:  I have installed perhaps 350 rock speakers in my life, and once you place it near a shrub, around the perimeter of your yard, and bury the wire, you don’t see it anymore, it just becomes a part of your landscape.  Now you have great sounding music around the pool and patio, where you hang out with your friends.  At less than $300 each you can grill steaks instead of those awful frozen burgers at your next party.  I like mine medium rare.


Toshiba Gets Serious With LED TVToshiba LED

I was a bit cautious to jump on the LED TV bandwagon, because some of the early models were so expensive, yet delivered what I thought was an inferior picture. I am still a major fan of plasma technology, but LED is a force to be reckoned with. Toshiba is shipping their UX series, and they are incredible.  While not as razor thin as some LED’s (we can talk about back lighting vs. side lighting another time), the 46″ model is still an amazing 2″ deep. Off axis viewing is very impressive, and the 1080p picture is sharp and clear. We are currently selling this model for $1650, although price and availability fluctuates almost daily. And of course we offer complete, professional “no visible wires” installation.


BSUN Media Systems sells and installs everything shown above.  Prices, models and availability subject to change.  Give us a call and we’ll help you find the best equipment available for you home entertainment system or commercial environment.  From staying on top of the best products to offering complete design and installation, we are your one-stop home theater shop!