Posts Tagged ‘LCD TV’

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.

Lucy LuLu Buffett’s Recent Testimonial of BSUN Media

Saturday, July 24th, 2010 by BSUN Media Systems

We recently had some feedback from Lucy “LuLu” Buffett of the installation of BSUN Media’s install at LuLu’s at Homeport Marina. Here’s what she had to say:

It was the most memorable night in the history of LuLu’s! 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.

Lucy, we thank you for the kind words and hope the relationship we’ve forged lasts for many years to come!

3D or not 3D

Tuesday, May 11th, 2010 by Brad Sundberg - BSUN Media

I just read a pretty interesting article in CE Pro stating that Francis Ford Coppolla find’s 3D movies “tiresome.”  He states, “I personally do not want to watch a movie with glasses.  It’s tiresome.”

Roger Ebert recently blasted Hollywood’s latest fixation with 3D in Newsweek, saying it causes some people headaches and nausea, and makes almost any movie look darker.

I am in the process of writing on this topic on greater detail in my eNewsletter, but I lean towards their opinions at the moment.  I saw Avatar in 3D in Spanish Fort, and kept wanting the picture to be brighter.  The depth was impressive, but those glasses do get tiring after a while.

Keep in mind that Coppolla, Ebert and I (you don’t see the three of us listed together very often) did not grow up with iPods in our ears and XBox360’s connected to LCD TV’s in our bedrooms.  According to Nielsen Research, more then 67% of movie audiences are under the age of 35, so Hollywood will deliver what the audience wants to see.

More to come this one.  Here’s the Coppolla link:  http://www.cepro.com/article/francis_ford_coppola_3d_is_tiresome/?utm_source=CEPWeekly&utm_medium=email

Tech Tasting Menu April 2010

Tuesday, April 6th, 2010 by Brad Sundberg - BSUN Media

Just a few bytes

pee wee with iPad

I want my iPad!!  As of  Monday, April 5, 2010, early estimates are that Apple sold more than 425,000 iPads over the weekend.  So what is the iPad?  A giant iPod?  A notebook sized tablet for playing games?  A virtual photo album?  Behind the scenes many hardware and software companies are scrambling to find ways to integrate the iPad into their products.  Time will tell if it becomes a household and business tool, or the tech flavor of the month.

My love of Plasma TV’s
sometimes makes me feel like I am walking alone in
plasma the desert, but thankfully Panasonic continues to build and stand behind some of the prettiest plasma TV’s I have ever seen. Home Theater Magazine recently reviewed the 58″ model and gave it a great write up.  I have said it many times, but plasma just offers a slightly warmer, more realistic picture to me than LCD.  LCD wins the brightness contest, but I still think a whisper can deliver more than a scream.

Sometimes.


A backside only an integrator could love

Prowler

My friends at Zektor have built one of the best digitial video switchers I have ever seen or used.  The Prowler can handle 8 HD sources, plus upscale additional low def inputs, and route them to 8 outputs.  But wait, there’s more!  It even comes with digital outputs, so a single piece of CAT5e or CAT6 allows me to have TV’s more than 500 feet away, and have stunning video quality.  Wanna see one in action?  Go to Lulu’s in Gulf Shores and check out the TV’s all over the bars and patio, and a Prowler in the rack controlling everything.  The video quality is second to none, and the staff can control every TV from a simple Crestron touchscreen in the wall.  Just another tool that let’s BSUN Media provide you with the best audio and video systems available.