Update From the Road: Northern Thailand and Laos

This update comes from Northern Laos, right on the Mekong River. I’ve just finished filming in the hill tribe areas of Northern Thailand, and I am on my way to a 48-hour boat ride down the mighty Mekong River right into the Loi Kratong festival where the locals light candles and send them floating down the river by the thousands.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j4GazN3jTB4&w=560&h=315]

By Saturday I hope to be in Luang Prabang capturing footage of the majestic 7-tier waterfall and Asiatic bear rehabilitation center — ran entirely by Buddhist monks.

Stay tuned and check out all the videos to come from my filming trip through the Mekong region of Laos and Cambodia this month.

Subscribe to my YouTube Channel to find out when the new releases will com out.

Travel Geek Update, Penang, Malaysia, December 19, 2013

I arrived in Malaysia yesterday and took the afternoon to relax, read my book and escape the dry heat in the paradoxically located “dry heat bubble” of Penang, a small island and financial capital of the country’s northern state of the same name.  And if you don’t know (or haven’t read the gobs of other blogs about my visits here since 2009), it’s just off the coast from the mainland industrial shipping complex of Butterworth.

But today’s little jaunt through Penang offered me the same thing I get every time I go there: an amazing peek at a new side of the city. I rented a bike and finally rode throughout the day as I’ve wanted to do for so long.

But why would I want to ride through an arid city center in the hottest time of the day, you might ask? Well, Penang is located on the westernmost side of Malaysia. So the sunrise, and all it’s “golden hour” light is robbed from it by Malaysia’s central mountains. And then, because of the city is located on the eastern shadow of the largest and most prominent mountain on the island, Penang Hill (as it’s colloquially known, or Strawberry Hill as it’s historically known, or Bukit Bendara as it’s officially known), there’s also no sunset.

Why is this so important? Well, if you’re not a photographer, it’s probably not — especially since the only beaches, which might otherwise make it’s emerald-green seas enjoyable, are shored by polluted waters. The removal of just a few hours on either side of the mid-morning and late-afternoon sun, the light that photographers live for, makes for harsh shadows and bitter, wincing faces, and pale, shallow color pallets, and generally unattractive shots all around.

But, knowing that going in, it makes exploring and taking risks as a photographer much more amicable. And even in the stark heat that beats down on this island city, it’s actually winter here. So it would still be much worse in the northern hemisphere’s summer months. So what better time, I figure.

In any case, I rented a bike and made my way down Beach Road to Midtown, where I found a construction crew had left the gate open to the property they had been charged with cleaning. So, naturally, I welcomed myself in and began filming and photographing.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FNjtrGIOWgs&w=560&h=315]

A note about this video: This would be the first actual time that I am using my DSLR to make a video that I intended on uploading to my YouTube channel. So you might notice that the focus is off on the A-Roll sections of the film. That’s because I had the focal length set on what I thought was my head. Being along and having no one to set it on me in-frame, this was the result.

I’ll have to work on that. But I must say, I did enjoy only carrying around one camera body and getting all my photography as well as my video content for today’s blog. Quite exciting. So perhaps look for more of that in the future. I do like the versatility. But the constant focusing was driving me a bit nuts. No tripod either. Again, just went out shooting for an update. Nothing special!

Coming soon, I’ll write up my experience with the visa scam situation (and what to look for, as well as how to minimize your costs) and watching the transvestite hookers at work. Interestingly, the Indian guys really seem to like them. Who knew!?

The album from today, as well as from when I was here earlier this year, should be coming out soon on www.cyleodonnell.com.

December 16, 2013 Update

Hey Travel Geekers,
Next week I’ll be back in Malaysia for the umpteenth time for a short weekend doing visa paperwork. But while I’m there, I’ll more than likely run into something cool to film. So maybe I’ll do an update from the road. Those of you who caught the documentary that I filmed in Penang might enjoy seeing more of it from a different angle.

In other news, for those who have been following my video and Facebook updates on my recent filming junkets in Northern Thailand and Laos, I’ll start editing the footage from the Phuket Vegetarian Festival and northern hill tribes of Laos and Thailand after I return.

It will be fun finally getting these out since, all told, I’ve been back and forth filming in this area since the end of 2009.

These won’t start releasing until after the New Year 2014, and will only be about half of what I have planned for my docs in Laos and Cambodia.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J3vFnpxoIPw&w=560&h=315]

Then, hopefully around March, I’ll finally complete filming down the Mekong, through the Ho Chi Minh Trail (and other war-torn areas that I talked about in my latest Laos update) and down into Cambodia where I’ll be completing a focus piece on the freshwater Irrawaddy Dolphins living just south of the border.

Their numbers are in huge decline. So this will be a bittersweet trip, encompassing not just the awe of seeing freshwater dolphins for the first time (not to mention a rare opportunity), but also to film these creatures in what may well be their remaining years in existence. Hopefully I will be able to add my footage to the pool of collective media behind this wholly necessary movement to save them from extinction.

It will be as important as anything I’ve ever done. And so when that time comes, I’ll hope to call on my 35,000 readers and friends and social networks and contacts and those who have enjoyed my efforts in documenting international cultures and causes these last ten years.

Help me get the word out and maybe we can help the impoverished people of Cambodia and these amazing creatures in one fell swoop, by increasing the eco-tourism to the area and decreasing the need for net fishing along this fragile strip of waters.

More to come on that. It’s going to be an exciting year!

Thanks for spending it with me!

November 14, 2013 Update

Filming in the northern mountains of Laos and Thailand, I have had some amazing experiences so far. They will be sure to continue as I have much more filming planned for early 2014 and beyond.

Check out this video update from the road, and be sure to subscribe to my YouTube Channel as I will have the new Borneo documentary out soon as well as everything slated for the 2014 filming set (the Phuket Vegetarian Festival, the Mighty Mekong River, the Vietnam War ravaged areas in Laos and even a focus piece on the declining numbers of freshwater Irrawaddy dolphins in Cambodia.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j4GazN3jTB4&w=560&h=315]

Video Description:

This update comes from Northern Laos, right on the Mekong River. I’ve just finished filming in the hill tribe areas of Northern Thailand, and I am on my way to a 48-hour boat ride down the mighty Mekong River right into the Loi Kratong festival where the locals light candles and send them floating down the river by the thousands.

By Saturday I hope to be in Luang Prabang capturing footage of the majestic 7-tier waterfall and Asiatic bear rehabilitation center — ran entirely by Buddhist monks.

Stay tuned and check out all the videos to come from my filming trip through the Mekong region of Laos and Cambodia this month.

Like, subscribe and share!

Check out additional footage from Travel Geek: Documentary Malaysia
at: www.travelgeekmagazine.com

follow on twitter: @cyleodonnell & @travelgeekmag

Find on facebook: www.facebook.com/thetravelgeek

Like on facebook: www.facebook.com/cyleodonnellthetravelgeek

Travel Geek Magazine is Now Online!

To date, I have tens of thousands of people reading this blog. These are made up of readers from my other blogs, newsletter recipients, fellow bloggers, and outright subscribers. There are also a ton of viewers that come here from YouTube, Facebook, Twitter, Pinterest and other social media pages. And of course, my photography website, books and video websites also help push things along.

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All in, I counted more than 30,000 people across the world who are on board and following me vicariously around the globe. And it’s dizzying when I step back and think of all the time and effort that I have put into this blog. I must have really liked doing it!

But it’s that very same effort that inspired me to open a magazine to house all of the media that I have created over the years.

Since 2005, I have been blogging, creating short films, feature length documentaries, multimedia presentations, published research, vlogs, podcasts, books and photography. And it’s all been from road, from the people and places that inspired me and certainly from the heart.

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This last year has been the most active year so far. So it’s no surprise that it’s also the year that I have gained the most followers along this road. But over the years, I have heard a lot of very thoughtful critiques of my blog which have led me to believe that many think that it’s a bit scattered and hard to find all the various items that I have published over the years.

So I asked myself, ‘what could I do to make things easy to find and less cumbersome to sort through?’ And so I started designing a new layout that takes from only the best and newest of my media and lays it all out in a well organized, user-friendly format.

And so, the Travel Geek Magazine was born.

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I have created a documentary films page that hosts only the best feature length videos that I’ve made throughout the years. I’ve opened up a new page dedicated solely to the podcasts that I’ve had with amazing, insightful travelers all over the world. I’ve

designated a place just for the short films and extras that scored the highest views on my YouTube, Vimeo and Blip channels.

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I’ve created an easy, organized list of links to all of my nearly 70 albums of photography collected from more than 35 countries. And I’ve even added new sections like Travel Oms for the inspired traveling readers out there; the most popular blog posts have been organized for those who just can’t seem to find that one favorite journal from Indonesia; and I’ve also made my books easy to find and peruse.

I also have a place for future advertisers and marketing ideas. But never fear, the magazine is still free and I’d love it if you took a moment to sign up for my latest newsletter. I will make every effort to release a monthly mailing that has all of the latest updates from the month’s travel and adventures.

If you refer a friend, I’ll also throw in a free ebook of your choice. Just have your friend email me to sign them up and reference your email and POOF! You both get to enjoy a book that I have created while traveling this wonderful world of ours.

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And, as always, please look over everything and email me with your suggestions.  I know there’s still a lot of work to do. But with your help, the Travel Geek Magazine will become as successful s this blog.

Send your references and suggestions to editor@travelgeekmag.com.

A little help here?

Recently, I released my latest film, Travel Geek Short: Documentary Gopeng.  And unfortunately, I have to upload it again in a re-edited version because I overlooked some copyrighted content.  I dunno how I could have let that slip, though I imagine it’s just a technical error.  But the way I see it this is a good thing.

For starters, I don’t like any of the cover images that automatically popped up when the first version finished uploading.  So this little hiccup allows me an opportunity to make this next version a little bit better.

As a YouTube partner, I am allowed to upload a cover image to each of the films that I release.  And I have been running an experiment on my channel to see which videos get the most views based on the images I select.  Some of the videos have clip shots from outtakes or extra scenes.  And recently, I have decided to start clipping the cover images directly from the same film just to ensure that I am advertising the film adequately.

In this latest short film, I’ve selected a few frames that I think would be cool to be the cover image for this film.  Take a look at them and let me know which one is your favorite.  Which one should I use (and remember, it’s going to be much smaller on YouTube, so the detail will be a factor).

Let me know in the comments, or email me at cyle@cyleodonnell.com.

 

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On the Road Filming in Borneo: An Update

Hey Travel Geekers,

A personal note to give you an update on what’s happening here:

I’ve flown my new producer and myself out to Borneo to get the concluding footage for my latest film, Travel Geek: Documentary Malaysia.  It will be released in two main parts, with extras and outtakes as well as short film releases over the next couple months.  I will also release Travel Geek: Documentary Borneo as a separate video, but will collectively create the video that is inclusive of all parts of the film once it’s all put together.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JPszWO5eVTA&w=560&h=315]

Cristina Owen is a blogger and travel enthusiast that I met over a podcast interview.  Those that follow this blog will remember her as the longest Travelcast that I’ve done so far.  We definitely got along well on the podcast and we’re doing good things here as well.  She flew out from San Francisco on her way through Asia for a chance to come filming with me.  We left from Kuala Lumpur last Sunday and already we’ve gotten some good footage.

There’ve been some interesting challenges along the trail so far.  For starters, Borneo is not the most agreeable place for weather, the most reliable place for travel plans or the most relaxing place to visit.  But that should, in now way, hinder your plans to come here if you want to do so.  The people, the epic, natural backdrop in all directions, the amazing and adventurous things to do and the geological and biological diversity all more than make up for what seem like troublesome challenges along the way.

Another factor for me is that I have picked up the cough that my producer brought in from Taiwan (not that anyone’s pointing fingers).  So it’s been a little more of a struggle to do the same types of hikes that I am used to doing due to muscle and bone soreness as well as a lung full of mucus that constantly needs to be coughed out.  But even with that in tow, I still (may have) got out to an amazing waterfall hike yesterday where I (might have) swam in a pond fed by an absolutely breathtaking 40-foot-tall waterfall in the middle of Lambir National Park.  I (possibly) had the park all to myself, too, because I (kinda, sorta, might have) showed up after the park had closed for the day… and (kinda, sorta, might have) happened to hop the fence and enter the park without a pass, a filming permit or even registering my name at the park office.  That might have happened.   I dunno.  The footage will have to speak for itself.

So, here I am on day four of my trek and I have seen and done enough things to satiate my travel bug.  And I’m only halfway through.  I’ve gotten a locally crafted tattoo from the local Iban artisans, I’ve filmed wild proboscis monkeys leaping from tree to tree, seen 3-meter-long pythons and deadly pit vipers amid the inescapably beautiful backdrop of Borneo’s wilds.  And I’ve still got Class IV rapids at the Padas River, a Mosque walk through the tiny country of Brunei Darussalam, and to make it back to Kota Kinabalu to possibly fit a mountain climb in before heading back on Sunday morning.

This is turning out to be one helluva film.  I can’t wait to see the edited version.

Travel Geek: Documentray Malaysia Update – Last Filming Roadtrip Before Release

That’s right Travel Geekers, I am in the final stretch of filming for Travel Geek: Documentary Malaysia.

This update from the road comes from my hotel just outside Kuala Lumpur after an epic hike up Mount Tabur West, a three- to five-hour hike depending on ability. More footage will be gathered in this last film shoot. I’ve headed out on peninsular Malaysia’s roadways in search of the most adventurous activities This country has to offer.

And trust me, I found a few: Waterfall repelling (abseiling), spelunking in gigantic caverns, searching for meters-wide flowers (the world’s largest) in the country’s oldest and largest primary rainforest, motorized paragliding over a far north state, coral reef snorkeling on the beautiful east coast islands, white water rafting and an end-of-trip helicopter tour over the city.. The list is just endless.

With brand new camera gear, I am out to conquer Malaysia’s biggest and best. And my schedule is packed for the next couple of weeks.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZT8rWLErw1w&w=560&h=315]

Youtube Update May 5, 2013

Happy Monday everyone. I wanted to start this week off by beginning the process of integrating my other media into the blog. So I thought I’d share my YouTube intro video with all the readers and maybe get more of you to subscribe to my channel.

Normally I try to average a release of one new video per week. Some weeks I upload three or four in preparation for those weeks when I know I’ll be traveling or filming. These videos are podcasts (which I call Travelcasts) with other bloggers and travelers. Others are Travel Geek Top Ten videos, where I talk about the top ten tips for travelers on a new topic each time. And some are the outtakes and extras from filming junkets I’ve recently taken.  It really just depends on what I am working on.

Whatever I am doing at the moment, I am almost always sure to be making a video of it or talking about it in front of the camera, or something video related. So my channel is never too far from fresh content.

Watch my channel intro video and then head over to subscribe. There should also be a link at the end of the video to subscribe directly.

Enjoy!

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p7_ulYq5eDg&w=560&h=315]

Wanna connect further?  Look up at the top left of the page and find me on Twitter and Facebook, too!

My New Book Has Been Published!!

Once again, I am humbled and overwhelmed by the amazing sense of fulfillment that I have been honored to receive this year.  It’s been my most successful year in a very long time.  And it keeps getting better.

To top it all off, I have released my latest book, Portraits from the Pavement: Slices of Life in North America.

It’s available for iTunes and for the iPad HERE.  This version is $3.99.

And it’s cheapest version, $2.99 on PDF, is available HERE.

It’s also available as a hard copy in softcover, hardcover and with ImageWrap HERE.  These prices start at $37.89.

If you visit the BOOKS page on my website, you can preview the first 30 pages or so.  So head over and check that out.

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From the back of the book:

The first of more than a dozen image-driven narratives, Portraits from the Pavement: Slices of Life in North America, showcases my first four years working as a media professional in the U.S. and Canada. Represented in more than 160 inspiring images across 92 fully illustrated pages, this book exhibits a collection of the most breathtaking images taken as a budding photographer and undergraduate journalism student.