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MITOCW | watch?v=Docl3KOqnHI The following content is provided under a Creative Commons license. Your support will help MIT OpenCourseWare continue to offer high quality educational resources for free. To make a donation or to view additional materials from hundreds of MIT courses, visit MIT OpenCourseWare at ocw.mit.edu. PROFESSOR: All right, so for the rest of class, I'm going to talk about post-production. Do you guys want to take a five minute break before I jump into that? OK. I will do that when you guys come back. All right, so last lecture-- should I stand up for this since I stood for all the other ones? OK. Feel free to interrupt me at anytime. So I'm going to start off with my favorite quote of all time, at least for this class, which is, "In writing, you must kill all your darlings." And that is what today's lecture is about. Post-production 101 or Killing All of Your Darlings. So when we think of production, we think of the journey that we have taken in the last week of this class. We start with ideation, we script, we storyboard, shoot, edit, and then we get to this product magically. And we have these three concrete steps of pre-production, production, which is what you're about to do, and post-production. Let me know when I can go to the next slide. The reality is that it's not like that at all. And maybe you've seen that. Hopefully, you've seen that in the course in the last week-- that you don't do production in this nice linear, sequential format, but you ideate and you script.
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