Showing posts with label Drive. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Drive. Show all posts

March 25, 2014

Momo in Slo-Mo

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OK, Drive got us at the title...  but it's a great video to watch too.  Enjoy it

December 4, 2013

Journalists in DTMs!

5 comments:


Recently, BMW invited a number of journalists to drive one of their DTM cars in Spain.
No surprise, Harris is first out of the box with his report...


October 17, 2013

Throwback Thursday: "Oversteer will come just before impact"

3 comments:
One of the best segments ever on Drive with Chris Harris playing straight man to David Coulthard hilariously dry humor.



May 22, 2013

10/10ths And Blind In A Soggy Green Hell

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Onboard with Leh Keen in the Farnbacher Racing Porsche GT3 R competing in the top SP9 GT3 class at the ADAC 24 Rennen at the Nürburgring this past week end. Leh was running in P 17 when the race was stopped because of weather.   The Farnbacher car dropped out in the 18th hour ending 141st overall.

A sick thought: as impressive and terrifying this video is (check out the "code brown moment" at the Pflanzgarten 2 crest!) it's entirely possible there may have been drivers even faster than Leh in the rain!  Insane.


March 26, 2013

Porsche GT3 Challenge, Sebring

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Proper film by the guys at Drive, finally well written in long form and with one of the best motorsport commentators ever, the voice of endurance, Radio Le Mans' John Hindhaug. Well done!

Looks like IMSA Porsche GT Challenge at Sebring was invaded by Axis of Oversteer as team NGT adopted the orange and silver livery for all its cars, including double winner Angel Benitez.



It was not a very good week end for CG, a bad qualifying compromised both races, but he did climb from 17 to 8th in race 2. Here is that race from inside the car


January 16, 2013

California Singer

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In the market for (very)  expensive retro, some people like those wide-bodied japanese customs, I think I would much, much rather this...

October 17, 2012

More Grip ≠ More Fun

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The Korean GP was a dull race on a horrid track, for something much more fun check out Chris Harris along with Richard and Andrew Frankel racing not one but two fantastic old cars on a fantastic old track.

More Grip ≠ More Fun

August 28, 2012

The Drive Effect.

11 comments:
 

Entertaining car journalism video as we know it was born in Britain with two "founding fathers": Jeremy Clarkson and Tiff Needell.

Most auto reviews in the US were in 80s MotorWeek mode, Clarkson a brilliant snarker who never minced words, blew the genre open  and created the entertainment behemoth that is Top Gear,.  For real tracktards though, Tiff was the man. While we suspect JC is a much better driver than his persona allows him to show, Tiff was always the king of sideways,  ripping around tracks he's the man who made it essential for every car reviewer to include a sideways shot, no matter how inappropriate the car.

Then, somewhere around 2007 or so Chris Harris popped up on the radar as sort of a blend of Clarkson and Needell. He had driving cred and could write with a tinge of that Clarkson irreverence. His clips for Autocar were always "the cool ones".

Late in 2011 Axis contacted Harris, CG was going to be racing in the 24 HRS of Daytona and there was an available seat in the car. We thought Evo, where Harris had moved to after a missed opportunity with the internet only magazine Driver's Republic, might be interested in covering the 50th edition on the Daytona, from the inside. But it was not to be, Harris told us he had just left EVO for a secret project that was going to be huge!



That project turned out to be Drive, a YouTube only publisher of long form automotive culture videos. By any measure, the success of Drive has been phenomenal.  From scratch, Drive has gained about 130,000 subscribers in just eight months and in the process changed the way everyone does internet videos.  Motor Trend re-launched their six year old YouTube channel with a familiar multi segment format, Car And Driver launched their version in May. Content on both of these historic publishers is quite different from what you might have seen just a year ago.

Who better to discuss the "Drive Effect" than with its creator and producer J.F. Musial.

AXIS: Tell us where the idea for Drive came from, how was it born?

J.F. MUSIAL:  In late 2006 at around the same time my good friends Alex Roy and David Maher set the transcontinental speed record from New York to Los Angeles, I met Emil Rensing. Alex had introduced me to Emil as someone that could help build the Automotive Division of the newly formed Next New Networks. I took the job working under the wings of the legendary Mike Spinelli. For those that don't know, Next New Networks was the parent company of Fast Lane Daily and Garage419. Next New Networks was eventually acquired by YouTube at the end of 2011 while at the same time I was building my own production firm, TangentVector.

Fast Lane Daily was always designed for a younger demographic. While we demonstrated the value of online video, in my opinion we were too early to the game. Our audience grew, but it was difficult to gain the trust of the automotive manufacturers and advertisers. No one at the time understood such a strange business model with a core competency focused around online video content. I always had ideas for producing something to reach a wider demographic, but it wasn't until the middle of 2011 when we had something on paper that looked feasible.


Emil and I initially had the working title of DriveIT; we never actually thought we could get the name DRIVE. Obviously should have done our due diligence earlier. Come October 2011, I started figuring out how we could financially make DRIVE work and how we could define the brand as being something unique.

Although Fast Lane Daily was not the car cult I wanted it to be, the knowledge we obtained from the show's production was undoubtedly valuable. We had produced over 1200 episodes by the end of 2011, plenty of time to learn how to make cheap car videos that looked expensive. Also with TangentVector's rapid growth, we had the expertise and equipment to produce the high production value we wanted for DRIVE. One of the most important aspects we discovered from Fast Lane Daily was the idea of routine programing schedules; training the audience to expect certain shows at certain times, much like TV.

By November 2011, I had a plan put together, a list of shows I wanted to produced that knocked on the door of all the different types of gear heads in the industry. Come December 2011 we had the most important element of DRIVE put together: The branding/graphics package. We were a small team but we needed to look big. My best friend Josh Vietze, a graphic designer, branded DRIVE in under two month. We knew we were going to have all these different shows under the DRIVE umbrella, but we needed to make sure they all felt part of the DRIVE family.


AXIS: Give us a bit of an outline of the various segments

J.F.M.:  As stated previously, we have scheduled programing. Some shows run every week of the year, while others are quarterly. Shows like SHAKEDOWN, Road Testament, and Chris Harris On Cars run every week. These are time sensitive shows. SHAKEDOWN covers motor racing while Road Testament is our op-ed section. Chris's job is to review a new car ever week. Most of the time those cars are new, but sometimes we have to default to the industry classics. E30 Rally Car anyone?

The rest of the lineup involves content not as time sensitive. TUNED with Matt Farah covers the aftermarket industry, Alex Roy's Live and Let Drive is our road trip show, RIDE APART is for our two wheeled friends, Big Muscle is the obvious muscle car show, and then we have things like DRIVE CLEAN which aims at educating the audience on how to detail their cars properly.


AXIS:  Harris is your biggest draw, how did your connection come about?


For the record, our biggest draw is our great content, not just Chris Harris. But to answer your question, I met Chris for the first time while we were filming our 24 Hours of Nurburgring Special in May of 2011; a special originally designated for Fast Lane Daily.

Prior to meeting Chris at the race, we had exchange a few e-mails but it wasn't until September 2011 that things started to come together. I had shared my ideas with him on how I wanted to build an online automotive video brand.
The biggest problem was something called the Atlantic Ocean between us and we were doing everything via email and phone calls.
During the last VLN race of 2011, a race Chris was participating in, I made the decision I needed to go finalize everything with him in person. I flew to Frankfurt on a Thursday morning, met with Chris at the Nurburgring Thursday night. Over beers we figured out how we were going to do this, then Friday morning I was on my way back to New York to figure out the rest of the DRIVE portfolio. My friends all thought I was nuts for flying to Europe for a three hour meeting with a guy named Monkey, but I think it paid off.

AXIS:  Looking at your twitter feed, it seems like you are never home....

J.F.M.:  I'm normally home in New York one week a month. No doubt the travel has taken a toll on my health at times. It all comes down to balancing the work load. Luckily, we've built out a fantastic team; I truly consider them a family.



AXIS: What is your background, when did you start in film/photography?

J.F.M.:  I went to school to be a Mechanical Engineer; that obviously didn't work out.Throughout my childhood I had always had a passion for photography. As a teenager I'd go up to Lime Rock Park and spend hours trackside taking photos of race cars. I still consider myself more of a photographer than videographer.

AXIS: How is Drive produced, can you share some tidbits for our tech savvy readers?

J.F.M.: First and foremost, it comes down to the team. All told, there are 19 people involved with DRIVE, but only ten of them are editors and shooters. You can have the badass equipment, but if the team sucks, nothing gets produced. We usually only have about 8 hours to shoot a new episode for DRIVE. Remember, we're publishing nearly three to four hours of content every week. You've got to keep the machine oiled and operating at full capacity. That means making sure team members don't burn out.

But in terms of gear we use, the typical stuff. No trade secrets: Panasonic HPX and HVX, Canon 7D and 5D, Nikon D800, Sony NEX5, and Contours for mounted shots.



AXIS: Speaking of, what would be your top tip for good video at the track?

J.F.M.:  Don't walk with your back to the traffic. All to often I see people turning their back to 180mph race cars. I was across the track from where Allan McNish went off at Le Mans in 2011. We are lucky no photographers were killed in that accident. A VERY lucky day for all parties involved.

In terms of shooting, my tip is to remember that the car is only half the story. Don't just pan with the car, establish the environment and atmosphere. Panning a car on the track with no reference points makes the car look slow. Adding trees and fences as perspective makes it all come to life.



AXIS: What has been your favorite episode so far?

J.F.M.: Spending the day with my two good friends Will Barber and Marc Urbano with the Carrera GTS in the Colorado Rockies. A day with a 911 on snow tires and my two good friends, beautiful scenery in the frigid cold with a Porsche.. Yes, awesome. More please.


AXIS: Do you get to drive, race or generally play with cars?

J.F.M.: I've driven rental cars on nearly every race track in North America. I'm a master camera car driver I'd like to say.  But to be honest with you, I wish I got more track time. I spend maybe 3-4 days a year actually in a proper car having fun on a track. I want more. I also dedicate 3-4 days a year to a fun, non-work road trip.


AXIS: What's ahead for Drive?

We've got things in the pipeline we're not ready to announce. More motorsports coverage. Bigger events. New shows. Ultimately, we're here to change the industry and the things we've got planned will do just that.

August 1, 2012

You got to love the UK....

9 comments:


A country with the most draconian speed camera enforced traffic laws that allows cars like the BAC Mono to be road legal.  British sense of humor.

July 11, 2012

Huayra Monkey

4 comments:


Be honest, would you rather spend $1.4 M on this rolling sculpture built in gorgeous factory in Emilia-Romagna or $1 M on a re-bodied Elise with a pushrod engine built in a shady Texas garage?

Surprised Harris can't think of another 730HP two wheel drive car though. Really? He could probably see one from where he filmed this clip!

You can follow Chris HArris on twitter @harrismonkey and read more about the Huayra at PistonHeads

May 14, 2012

Trackside Laguna Seca

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I hope the fellas at Drive don't take this the wrong way but this is our favorite segment they produce.

May 2, 2012

Chris Harris is the John Holmes of Car Porn

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Twenty minutes of luscious smoke filled beautiful pictures with three special cars grunting and groaning for the camera.

As far as content, a bit of a foregone conclusion after all, Harris owns the $208000 GT3 RS 4.0, by far the most expensive car in the bunch ( car journalism pays very well!).

As far as the lap times in the video, take them with a grain of salt. There is no info on tires, the GTS in on Pirellis Corsa and the GT3 RS likely on Michelin PSC, the Merc, maybe Continental Sport Contact?

I wish these guys would get on board with Traqmate, I would love to see an lap comparison animation to see where each car did what. That would be awesome but of course smoke works better on youtube and you can certainly just relax and enjoy the porn!





January 2, 2012

Seen enough of the Nürburgring 24?

6 comments:
24 Stunden Rennen Nürburgring 2010
photo:Sean Klingelhoefler

No? well Leo Parente, J.F. Musial and the gang are here to help with the first episode from DRIVE. Have a look and tell us what you think.




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