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Whether you need a snow storm,
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a huge gust of wind, or a fake rain shower,
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this man's got you covered.
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Some TV shows and movies film scenes in extreme weather
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to make the story feel more realistic.
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But there's one big problem with that approach.
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You can never count on the weather to work for you.
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Jeremy Chernick is a designer
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at J&M Special Effects in Brooklyn.
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You can't schedule the entire crew around waiting for snow.
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So you often have to make it yourself.
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Jeremy's company creates practical special effects
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for a variety of live shows, music videos, and other productions.
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All the Disney Broadway shows, "Aladdin," "Frozen."
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He made it rain on Shawn Mendes at the 2018 MTV VMA's.
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J&M also rents out equipment for TV shows
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like "Gotham," and "Elementary."
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Basically, any conditions you can imagine,
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he can whip up.
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But the trick to creating fake weather
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is that it just needs to look real in the camera frame.
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You don't need all the weather in the world
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to know it's raining in a shot this big.
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You just need rain in the background or rain on top.
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So what exactly does it take
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to create the illusion of weather on camera or on stage?
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There are a lot of different ways that rain is done.
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And it depends on whether you're interior or exterior.
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Outside, you can get a permit to hook
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up a hose to a fire hydrant or a water truck.
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You can split that water out to a variety of locations,
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and usually high big towers go up
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that can spray water from unbelievably high.
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Indoors you need a self-contained system attached to water supply.
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Right above me is a rain bar.
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So we have rain that is pouring down in sort of a five-inch channel,
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so if you're looking dead at it,
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it looks pretty three-dimensional because you have rain here and here,
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and plus we can add a level of sort of mist into that
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that will just give it an even larger depth of field.
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And you can have rows and rows and rows of them.
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The systems in place to keep that rain from never ever dripping unless you wanted it to rain
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is actually more complex than the moments when it's actually raining.
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It's mostly fairly low tech.
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There are a number of different products
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that are used to replicate snowflakes.
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You can get pretty large paper flakes
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that are squares and they fall in a very beautiful and specific way,
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you can get shredded paper that falls sort of organically.
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You can get it shredded plastic, which has a different feel to it,
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and the way that you deliver that is through blowers that are blowing it far overhead and a long distance.
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They also have special soap-based products
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that won't stain clothes or make the ground slippery.
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Essentially, it's like tiny bits of foam
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and that is a machine that is pushing that soap
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through a filter that makes it into snowflakes.
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Environmentally, there's all sorts of stuff
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that ends up in the air to fill a picture in terms of haze, fog, smoke.
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These effects are usually produced with a fog machine.
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The most commonly used interior fog is glycol based,
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which is a type of alcohol.
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Sometimes you want the fog to fill the screen,
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and other times you want low-lying fog,
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which requires a few special tricks.
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That is most often done now using liquid CO2,
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or liquid nitrogen to chill the glycol fog to a very cold level.
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And that coldness is what keeps it low to the ground.
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The thing that's funny about wind,
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to me, is that you don't see wind unless it's either moving clothing or hair,
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or if it has some fog or some level of fog in it.
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J&M has fans of all sizes.
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We have incredibly quiet fans designed specifically for live television.
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With any of these weather effects,
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you want to be extra careful to protect camera equipment and the actors.
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There's a shield, there's plastic bagging, there's sometimes tents.
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There's also a risk of flooding indoors.
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Often scenery is going to be built and designed with water catch underneath,
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so it will be raining on what looks like the floor,
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but it's designed to collect water.
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While these weather systems may not be exactly like the real thing,
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they get the job done.
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You don't have to do a huge amount of post work
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if your special effects are right and they look right.
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And they're telling your story.
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And the realistic stuff, is you can tell it's real.