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World Series of Poker Bets on Kinetic Productions

Since its inaugural event in 1970, the World Series of Poker, which will be hosted from June 2 through 15 by Harrah's Rio Suite Hotel and Casino (Las Vegas, NV). The 2005 WSOP tournament will be broadcast by ESPN.

Since its inaugural event in 1970, the World Series of Poker, which will be hosted from June 2 through 15 by Harrah’s Rio Suite Hotel and Casino (Las Vegas, NV). The 2005 WSOP tournament will be broadcast by ESPN.

Tony Kremer (pictured), principal engineer and founder of Kinetic Productions Las Vegas will be covering recording duties for this year’s World Series of Poker event. The intimate, subdued drama of a broadcast event such as the World Series of Poker essentially demands superb location sound. “There is no second chance,” explains Kremer. “In terms of actual game play on the table, what happens is what happens, and we’ve got to get it. If somebody mutters something clever or interesting, ESPN wants it to be there on tape. It’s got to be as clean and clear as possible with no breakups or hiss.”

For this event, Kremer wil use the Lectrosonics Venue Series receivers along with LM Digital Hybrid Wireless(tm) transmitters and Countryman EMW lavaliers. According to Kremer, Kinetic Productions’ mobile recording rig greatly benefits from the ergonomics the Venue Series provides. “I’ve had great experiences using all of the Lectrosonics ENG stuff,” recalls Kremer. “Lectrosonics is well known for reliability and durability. Their transmitters are made of machined aluminum, and they take a pounding in the field while always working strong. Last year, Lectrosonics’ Gordon Moore showed me a prototype for the Venue receiver, which really interested me. At the time, I realized that I was going to start doing more reality-type television programming where multiple microphones would be required in a very small amount of space. After seeing the Venue receiver, I knew it would fit this application nicely.”

Operating via Lectrosonics’ exclusive Digital Hybrid Wireless technology, the Venue Receiver System is a six-channel, 1U modular UHF unit that works seamlessly with both digital hybrid and select analog transmitters. The Venue Receiver combines 24-bit digital audio with an analog FM radio link, overcoming channel noise while eliminating compandor circuits and their accompanying artifacts. Features include 256 synthesized UHF frequencies per receiver module, a built-in antenna distribution amplifier and more.

The Venue’s DSP compatibility modes, in addition to the Digital Hybrid Wireless mode, allow backward-compatibility with all Lectrosonics analog wireless systems and certain models from other manufacturers. For Kremer, this was an especially attractive feature. “With the exception of older VHF stuff, the Venue worked with the existing transmitters that I already had,” Kremer explains. “That was an interesting benefit of which we are just now starting to take advantage. We had some Sennheiser handheld microphones that we wanted to use with the Venue Receiver, and after testing them, we found that they worked great.”

For recording WSOP events, Kremer and assistant Alan Strusser, use 10 player mics, two dealer mics, a P.A. feed and a hardwired stereo effects mic to two sync’d TASCAM DA-88 machines via a Mackie 1604 VLZ mixer. “The Mackie is used for the reference mix,” explains Kremer. “The receivers plug into the Mackie. Then we take the preamp outputs straight to tape. Our configuration uses two Venue receivers and a total of 12 wireless units. At any given time, we can have anywhere up to 10 players at the table. We also pre-wire a second dealer because dealers are always changing out, and both dealer mics are always being printed to DA-88.”

The addition of the Lectrosonics Venue receiver to Kinetic Productions’ mobile rig has also physically lightened Kremer’s load. “Suddenly I could fit six receivers in one rackspace,” Kremer explains. “The Venue has the features I need to do multichannel wireless without additional bulk. It’s not just six receivers. It’s six receivers, plus an antenna multicoupler with looping outputs. That’s a great advantage because we only need one set of antennas to feed all twelve receivers instead of a separate antennas, multicouplers, etc. The Venue receiver has everything I need in one package. It even has a spectrum analyzer built in.”

To find out more, please go to the company’s Website at www.lectrosonics.com.

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