1. Darralynn Hutson of full motion video
Darralynn Hutson is an American Pop Culture Journalist, TV and Film producer and multi-media Specialist. Darralynn Hutson has been an entertainment journalist for more than twelve years.
She learned the skill of listening very early in her career and its allowed her to develop longstanding relationships in the entertainment industry. She started her writing career with Urban magazines Upscale and The Source Magazine, reviewing and interviewing what would become Hip Hop greatest. Her niche pieces on black film has appeared in The Source Magazine, Honey, DGA Magazine, Savoy Magazine, Trace and Moviemaker.
She writes as a Scores and Soundtracks columnist for London-based BFM Magazine and the re-launched BE formerly Black Elegance. Her experience as a journalist has afforded her to motion picture industry access. Her Rolodex is valued and current.
Hutson exploded into the film industry after independently producing a film tribute to Langston Hughes, entitled Hughes Dream Harlem, with Harlem-based New Heritage Films in 2002. The film made its national broadcast debut on the Starz! Network and went on to tour five continents in film festivals, Corporate-funded screenings and college tours.
Her very first video production was Connections: a short documentary on the award-winning directors of the American Black Film Festival, formerly the Acapulco Black Film Festival, which screening during their fifth anniversary celebration in 2001. Most recently shes been a part of production management of two series for MTV Networks NEVER BEFORE SCENE: I, ROBOT and YOUR MOVIE SHOW: Shark Tale. Relocating to New York in 2002, allowed her independent film experience to flourish.
Darralynn has worked on the production teams of five short and feature-length film and video independent productions. TV One hired her to produce a pilot episode of a new home renovation series RENOVATE MY HOME that premiered its first season in November 2005. It was also in 2005 when her partnership with Justin Bryant produced the licensing of eight episodes of the original program for BET JAZZ, The Musicmakers currently negotiating its second season.
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2. Ashley Monroe discography of full motion video
The discography of American country artist Ashley Monroe consists of three full-length studio albums, two extended plays, nine singles, seven other appearances, and seven music videos. Following the death of her father in 2000, Monroe moved to Nashville, Tennessee as a teenager to pursue a music career.
In 2006 and at age nineteen, she signed a contract with Columbia Records. She collaborated with producer Mark Wright on her debut studio album and released an advanced single in 2006 called "Satisfied". The song became a minor hit, only reaching the forty-third position on Billboard's Hot Country Songs chart.
A second single "I Don't Want To" (a duet with Ronnie Dunn) reached the top-forty. Columbia failed to release her album until a top-twenty hit was created from the project. Meanwhile, advanced CD copies were briefly distributed.
Monroe was eventually dropped from the label in 2007. However, it was eventually released as a digital download in 2009. Following the departure, Monroe maintained a low-lying career in the country music industry.
In 2007, she collaborated on an EP of songs with Trent Dabbs. In 2008, she was invited by Jack White to participate in recording sessions on his label. She would later collaborate with his band The Raconteurs on the 2008 single "Old Enough".
She appeared on pop rock band Train's 2012 single "Bruises", which became a minor country-pop hit. She also wrote material for artists including Jason Aldean and Miranda Lambert during the later half of that decade. Forming a friendship with Lambert, the pair helped found a supergroup titled the Pistol Annies, alongside Angaleena Presley in 2011.
Teaming up with artist and producer Vince Gill, her second studio album Like a Rose was issued in March 2013. It debuted at number ten on the Billboard Top Country Albums chart and number forty-three on the Billboard 200 within its first week. The album's third single "Weed Instead of Roses" became a top-forty hit on the Hot Country Songs survey.
In 2014 she was featured on Blake Shelton's song "Lonely Tonight", since becoming Monroe's first major top-ten Billboard single. In March 2015, "On to Something Good" was released as the lead single to Monroe's second studio album, The Blade, via Warner Bros. Nashville.
On February 26, 2016, Monroe released a live album containing songs from her previous records and a cover of the Gram Parsons song "Hickory Wind". It was recorded at Third Man Records live before an audience of 200 people on May 12, 2015.
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3.
Life of full motion video
Lucas Vidal was born and grew up in Madrid. His father is also a musician and his grandfather was one of the founders of the record company Hispavox. He began studying piano and flute at age 4.
When he was 16 years old he went to Berklee College of Music for a summer term to play sax and was introduced to the film scoring department and Vidal decided that he wanted to pursue a career as a film composer. He met his business partner, Steve Dzialowski, and decided to create a company, Music and Motion Productions, while attending Berklee. Vidal made history when he became the youngest Berklee College of Music student ever to compose and record the score to a feature film with a full orchestra.
Hundreds of recording sessions and dozens of movie scores, commercial music jobs, video game soundtracks and ballet scores later, Vidal is getting his biggest-ever assignments. After studying with a scholarship to the Berklee College of Music, he received his bachelor's degree with Summa Cum Laude and moved to New York City, where he studied at Juilliard and worked on some TV movies for NBC Universal and European projects. Then he decided to move to Los Angeles Vidal's career was kicked into high gear in 2011 when he was nominated for Breakout Composer of the Year by the International Film Music Critics Association for the film "Sleep Tight" ("Mientras Duermes").
In 2012 he composed the musical score for Fast & Furious 6. Other recent projects include The Raven with John Cusack and The Cold Light of Day starring Bruce Willis and Sigourney Weaver, resulting in a nomination for "Discovery of the Year" at the World Soundtrack Awards In 2015, Vidal co-founded CHROMA with Steve Dzialowski and Chris Ramsdell. CHROMA has created music for trailers such as The Hunger Games, Terminator, and Interstellar as well as commercials such as Gatorade, Wendy's, and AT&T.
In Decemberwhen?, Lucas Vidal conducts the official Christmas concert at the Teatro Real in Madrid playing music by John Williams and his original music too. Vidal composed the "Olympic Suite for ESPN" for the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
Later he was awarded an Emmy for the best original music. He worked as well on recent movies such as Alegra, Tristeza, El rbol de la Sangre, The Best Day of My Life. He won the Goya for Best Score for the movie Endless Night.
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4. Biography of full motion video
Herx was born in Chicago on June 29, 1933, and graduated from Loyola University Chicago, where he earned undergraduate and graduate degrees in history. In contrast to the National Legion of Decency's model of "the purification of the cinema" in which films deemed to be offensive to Roman Catholics were listed so that they could be avoided, Herx began his film reviewing effort on 1962 together with Rev.
Ronald Holloway, when they created the Chicago Center for Film Study as a way to look at films from a perspective that engaged cinema. Herx worked for the Catholic News Service's Media Review Office, which is a successor to the National Legion of Decency and then the National Catholic Office for Motion Pictures, and would become the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops' Office for Film and Broadcasting after Herx retired. He began working for the Media Review Office in 1964, reviewing more than 10,000 films during his career, and retired as the organization's chief critic in 1999, watching many of the movies together with his family at their home.
In addition to a capsule review, Herx gave films a rating of A for films that were deemed morally unobjectionable that ranged from A-I (for general audiences) through A-IV (for adults, but with reservations), with films deemed morally offensive being given a rating of "O". The Full Monty, the 1997 film about unemployed men who turn to a striptease act to make money, earned an A-IV rating that reflected its positive message of overcoming obstacles. In reviewing a number of films in the mid-1990s, Herx gave Clueless a rating of "O" despite the film's PG-13 rating from the Motion Picture Association of America, while the film Priest was given an A-IV rating, despite controversy about the movie's dealings with the homosexuality of a young priest and his crisis of faith.
Herx was proud of the fact that he would watch each movie in its entirety regardless of content and was deeply bothered when he was told that reviewers Roger Ebert and Gene Siskel had walked out on a film. Herx's son noted that "he felt his job was to sit there and watch it and give an honest review" no matter how bad it was. His Our Sunday Visitor's Family Guide to Movies and Videos provided an overview of films based on their content and their conformance to Roman Catholic teachings.
Herx died on August 15, 2012, at the age of 79 in his Ramsey, New Jersey, home of complications of liver cancer.