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They used around 150 cameras for the last Super Bowl. Most of them were Sony studio cameras, controlled with Sony remotes to ensure perfect alignment. But now, they’ve added a lot of specialty cameras: probably 4 or 8 pylons, each equipped with 2 to 4 cameras, plus drones, handheld mirrorless cameras, mini high-speed cameras, and a few other mini-cams for PoV (Point of View) shots. Last year, they even had a mini-cam inside the cars driving from the Bellagio to the stadium, controlled remotely over cellular. An Elixir process ran on a RIO in the car to manage the camera and connect to a cloud server, while the remote panel was linked to the same server to complete the connection. All three ran Elixir code, with the cloud server acting as a simple data relay.

If you want the green of the grass on all the pylon cameras to match your main production cameras, adjustments are a must. And with outdoor stadiums, this is a constant task—lighting conditions change throughout the day, even when a cloud moves across the sky. When night falls, video engineers are working non-stop to keep everything perfectly aligned with the main cameras.



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