Travel Geek: Documentary Malaysia (Full HD)

Having spent 2013 filming in all parts of Malaysia, this documentary showcases six of the nine selected filming locations. Starting off in Malaysia’s cultural hub, I move northward from Malacca to celebrate Thaipusam outside of Kuala Lumpur. From there, I discover street foots, mile-high temples and Malaysia’s smallest and most diversified national park, roaming sand, sea and jungle in Penang. Then I take to the rafting waterways and climb active waterfalls in Gopeng. Following that is a trip through the tea-rich mountains of the Cameron Highlands where I find the world’s largest flower. And I end my journey on a tropical island getaway, snorkeling on Tioman Island.

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Check out additional footage from Travel Geek: Documentary Malaysia
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For the rest of the footage, as well as outtakes, extended cuts and extras that weren’t included in this film, check out the “Short Documentary Films” playlist, or select from the links below:

TGS: Documentary Malacca http://youtu.be/HGt9bMvJXeE

TGS: A History of Georgetown http://youtu.be/H4KI6T7gLLg

TGS: Hiking Tabur West http://youtu.be/KpK9tnRRAm4

TGS: Documentary Gopeng http://youtu.be/X2REKG-3w-8

TGS: DOcumentary Thaipusam (Extended Cut) http://youtu.be/PvpIWH5-gBo

TGS: Documentary Thaipusam http://youtu.be/el8V5UyY0Wk

TGS: Cameron Highlands http://youtu.be/7j1-bYKnrr0

TGS: Taman Negara http://youtu.be/T2raaBH8UPk

TGS: Hiking Tioman Island http://youtu.be/xpmola-7zWA

TGS: Snorkeling Tioman Island http://youtu.be/o5Hz5Qd0gKY

Serdang: Giant Hamster Ball Adventure http://youtu.be/mtEGWAMp26Q

Gourmet Chicken Tandoori Cuisine in Malacca http://youtu.be/_E3EJmsD3ek

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.

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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!

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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My Films Made it to IMDB!

This morning I got some great news:  Not only did I not die during my sleep, but I awoke to find out that my movies had been listed on the International Movie Database, IMDB.com.

For those of you who don’t know, IMDB is the go-to website for all of Hollywood’s smash hits.  They have every single movie ever released within the U.S. and they even list most of the world’s foreign films as well.

IMDBList

To top that, they have a totally enmeshed network of links that allow its visitors to click from movie to actor to director to producer to film company and more.  Just go there and check it out.  You’ll see what I mean.  It’s a veritable smorgasbord of movie geek delicacies.

And now they have the best travel documentaries ever made: The Travel Geek series!  So we can finally say that IMDB is complete.  HAH!

What great news!  I was so stoked when I found out that I checked my website email and I found out that not only did I receive the distinguished honor of being listed on this massive and widely known website, I also had an official offer in my inbox as well.  I won’t go over the details here, but let’s just say that it was including paying me for my listing and possibly even purchasing the films and paying me to complete even more.

Oscar’s; here we come!

There has been so much momentum with my films in the last six months, that I figured, now that I have this amazing news, I may as well take this opportunity to list them here.

While traveling, I’ve done a lot of things.  I’ve published four books, finished my master’s degree, produced more than 75,000 images on my online gallery and released four feature films.  And that has all been since 2011.

But there’s been a lot more.  My YouTube channel has nearly 50,000 page views and more than 200 subscribers.  This blog is followed by 1,200 other bloggers, 1,545 registered email followers, almost 4,000 Twitter followers across four accounts and 3,523 Facebook followers.

In the last four months, I’ve seen the largest spike in followers, viewers and readers than in any time that the blog has been running.  And I am just getting started.

In the very near future, I am going to be publishing an ebook for each of my online galleries.  And since there are more than 3,000 photos across 60+ albums, that’ll be quite a lot of books!  And that’s in addition to a deal that I am working on to publish a series of travel short stories and journals later this year.

I have an app currently being built so that I will be able to deliver the ebooks as cheaply as possible to iPad, iTunes and Google Player users.  So there will soon be an app available to view those books and possibly even this blog at the flick of the finger.

So thanks a lot for sticking with me throughout the years.  And look forward to even more in the months to come.

To see my listing as the Director of the Travel Geek films, go to www.imdb.com and in the search bar search for “Cyle O’Donnell.”  The direct link is HERE.

I have also been notified by the company that I will be featured on several of the documentary blogs that are upcoming, and also that they know about my “Travel Geek: Documentary Singapore film which will be listed shortly.

They have asked that I keep them abreast of my latest films, as it’s obvious that it is a series of films that I am creating.  And so I should also be seeing Travel Geek: Documentary Malaysia being listed hopefully by the end of the year.

I have just gone for my first filming session to Borneo.  While there, I also filmed a short for my Top Ten Travel Tips for Exercising on the Go. But I plan on going for my second set soon.  Once I have completed what I hope to complete there in June or July, I may be finished filming for the entire documentary.  So if that’s the case, I will be releasing Travel Geek: Documentary Malaysia ahead of schedule!

I’ll keep you posted on all the progress.

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What do you think?  Have you watched my films?  Do you like them?  Do you think that they could be better or is there any advice you can offer?

Go to my YouTube page and watch a few of the other videos.  Do you like the content? What can I do to make it better?

How about IMDB?  Do you go there and do you have anything to add about the page that these movies are listed on?

 

Thanks for your comments!

Latest Travel Geek Release from Documentary Taiwan: Part Four

Traversing the world’s markets has got to be one of the most interesting and fun things for me.  Some people just hop in and hop out – never really realizing what they’re passing by.  Some people like to go, sit down and eat.  Others enjoy them for the aromas, sounds and variety in its many forms.  Others still go to sell goods, to talk shop or even perform for the masses.

I like to go for all of these reasons – well, probably not to sell things or perform.

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

I like to take it all in.  I am there for the experience.  And no matter how many times I go to the same market, I always meet new people, discover new foods or learn something new and interesting about the culture.  It just never fails to be a cool experience.

To date, I’ve bought the most amazing things I’ve ever seen at various Asian markets.  I’ve bought (and eaten) everything from tarantulas and snakes to bugs and alien-looking fruits.  I ate sewer rat at a market in Indonesia.  I picked, cooked and ate a guinea pig at a market in Peru.  I even bought a squirrel – I’m not kidding; I bought a squirrel at the Jatujak market in Bangkok and kept it as a pet.  But all this is nothing compared to what I’ve passed up.

On any given day, you can buy a cobra, an asp, a viper or any number of other deadly snakes at markets in Cambodia, Laos and Thailand.  You can buy all the newest pirated films, music and software that’s been hacked and unlocked.  Fashion items from Gucci and Lauren to Elle and others.  There’s just no limit to what you can find in markets.

And the Kaohsiung market is no different.

In Part Four of my latest film, Travel Geek: Documentary Taiwan, I dive right in and take viewers for a spin through one of the country’s biggest and most mesmerizing collections of food vendors, stall restaurants and niche workers.

Latest Travel Geek Release from Documentary Taiwan: Part Three

In Part Three of the documentary series in Taiwan, I visit Lanyu Island.  And before I even arrived, I came upon some harsh realities of this part of the country.

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Firstly, it’s only on the whim of the boat captains that the ferries disembark.  This was troubling since I knew that if I had a more stringent schedule, I’d have been very disappointed about the turnout here.  My camera person and I didn’t have to wait long for our trip.  But I heard that we were lucky.  We were only there for an hour when the boat captain gave the signal for people to load up.

This is actually not uncommon for the area, I’ve heard, though.  In fact, the whole of the east coast in Taiwan blends much of an “island feel” into its way of life.  Things happen when the initiative of those in charge of the task topples the inertia that resists it.  Aside from that, the weather pretty much determines everything else.

Especially here in the south of the east coast, the climactic changes are sudden and often fierce.  This is where the Pacific finds its ending point.  And the last remaining fetters enacted against it have either been destroyed by the damaging elements or are weathering away to the realm of obsolete.

On the boat trip, there were similar and negative challenges to the comfort most of us expected to have.  We all heard that it was a bit bumpy.  But what we didn’t hear was that it was three hours long in choppy seas, the “choppiness” of the seas were such that 20-foot swells were common, and that the engine’s exhaust pumped right into the passenger deck, inflaming the sense of nausea by removing what little air was available to quell the initial upsurges of sea sickness.

About an hour in, I started feeling it myself – and having been on boats for a good portion of my life, I considered myself to have a pretty strong stomach.  But this was not doing much to keep me from turning quite pale in the presence of people blowing chunks every couple minutes.  I fared well until the fumes from the engine made me almost pass out from aerial poisoning.  But once I was out on the back deck for a breather, I could feel the blood making its way back through my body, rejuvenating what was previously a circulating concoction of toxicity that could kill a nest of cockroaches.

Lightheaded but aware, I made several trips in and out of the cabin to keep myself conscious.  And once we arrived, all the passengers sort of gathered on the concrete harbor to collect themselves for a few minutes before heading off to their respective destinations.

I’d say tourists comprised only about 10 percent of the travelers on board.  The rest were native Yami bringing goods and supplies back to their homes or coming back from school to visit their families.  So I instantly knew that we were there at the right time of year to bypass the tourist rush (late January).

After snapping a few shots, I had my first encounter with the long, bony arm of Taiwanese law.  The Coast Guard was on watch with a few semen at the helm of a wind-worn look-out shack just past the main harbor.  And since they were the only live bodies around after I’d stupidly wasted my first few minutes snapping away at the amazing view of the imposing mountains abutting the southern coastline along the boat dock, I pestered them into getting in touch with the locals that were in charge of the motorbikes that were parked in a random place along the concrete boardwalk.

It wasn’t too much hassle to rent a bike.  I finally worked out that I’d be renting for a couple days at $NT500/day.  There was no need for a driver’s license, a passport or even a handshake.  These guys knew that there was no escaping this tiny island without everyone knowing about it.  And even if I’d had it in mind to try and skip town, the boat captain was probably related to the bike owner in some way.  So, keeping things honest by way of the scarcity of white faces in these parts, it was a quick conversation, and off to see the sights.  I donned a helmet, cranked the engine over and set off into the nearest village.

Tribal villages in Lanyu are not what they seem in writing.  When you drive through this area, it’s immediately evident that this area was once much more “native” than it is now.  Currently, concrete slabs and continuous construction of small buildings takes place everywhere you’d hope to go here.  And with every direction boasting Levy’s, satellite TV and rap music blasting out of the sheet-for-a-window cottages, it’s a lot like driving through south Chicago – if it laid against a lush, green hill.

In between villages, though, is where the real allure takes the mind on a pleasant, time-forgotten journey, with its less humanized topography.

Every few hundred meters driving up the east coast of the island, a giant, overhanging ledge would spew up a giant, bluish mist and fill the chilly air with a palpably salty fragrance.  If I wasn’t on the bike, I’d think I was flying through a sea of clouds that took on the hue of a glacier and filled my nose with the essence of table salt.

I’d stop and snap a few shots as humongous surges of ice-blue water thunderously beat down against the jagged, weathered, charcoal-colored rocks below.  It was a vivid pallet for the senses.  And the grime in the air added a tone not unlike the old harbors of the south Maine coast.  All that was missing was the infrequent clanging of the offshore brass-bell buoy… and the incessant screeching of giant seagulls.

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I’d stop between every village and climb around on the rocks, snap photos of the free range goats.  We even took the little off-shooting roads to see where they’d lead.  We came up on this open field where this particularly brave batch of them let us approach quite closely.  And I almost stepped on this little infant goat (what is the name for them anyway?).  It was cute.  The camera person thought it was a good idea to pick it up.  And by all appearances, it seemed like the natural thing to do.  This cute, little, scruffy animal seemed about as threatening as a marshmallow at a campfire.  But I knew better.  I knew that this little guy was born with a set of chompers and jaw muscles that would just as soon take off with my finger as sit there and continue to look cute.  So I let it be.

When we arrived back in the original town that we’d started at, we asked around until we met an English-speaking native.  Her name was Zoe, and she was on the boat with us.  She’d returned along with a few others from the mainland for the college break to catch up with family at the onset of the Chinese New Year festivities.

She and her friend invited us to stay with them in one of their extra rooms.  It was bare-bones.  But it was workable.  The room itself was spacious, or perhaps it felt that way because there was literally nothing in it.  We’d brought our sleeping bags with us for the road trip around the southern tip of the island.  So we were prepared to have colder weather.  But it’s a good thing, because without those, we’d have had nothing between us and the hardwood floor underfoot.

But for what the accommodation lacked in amenities, the family more than made up for in hospitality.

As soon as we arrived the ladies invited us over to their house for a midday lunch that was cooking in the kitchen.  We sat down and the women started hitting on me – it was uncomfortable.  But we made it through the meal and headed back to the room for a siesta.

That night we found out just how difficult it was to get a hot meal at night.  The shops closed up pretty early, and if it wasn’t for a neighboring grocery/everything-else store, we’d probably have gone completely without food for the rest of the day.

We managed to score some noodles and hardboiled eggs for about three times their normal selling price on the mainland.  But it was what we needed to finish off the night and we slept until the morning.

The second day was much like the first, with the exception of increased difficulty in finding food.  But we knew enough to plan ahead at that point – and we knew right where to go for provisions.  So we were spared of a night full of tummy-grumbling and slept soundly.  That is, we slept soundly until the storm hit in the middle of the night which shook the floorboards underneath us until the early morning.

And it was that fateful storm that would also prove to be quite a first-perceived wrench in our plans.

We’d started the road trip with the intention on going all the way up to the gorge in the car and camping for a night there.  But the storm had left the sky above the southeastern coast with enough remaining pressure to churn the seas into a roiling, non-navigable fusion of combers and gales.  So, while I was disappointed that we’d be missing out on Taroko Gorge (which I made up for by filming later), I was okay with maintaining my current status of “alive” by staying on the island until the high winds passed.

In any case, there were no boats adrift today.  So our opinions on the matter were about as persuasive as a prey’s appeal to a predator.

And this turned out to be a good thing in the end.  Because when the family found out that we’d be staying another day instead of taking off that morning, they invited us to eat this huge meal chock-full of all the local delicacies.

Soups seasoned with local herbs whose names I’ll never be able to recall; a stack of locally endemic potatoes, squashes and other root vegetables; and a variety of teas and other hot drinks – these were all meted out with dizzying generosity on our last day on Orchid Island.  And this is after a giant pig was butchered, quartered, divvyed and shared with bottle after bottle of Taiwanese booze.  By midday, we simply couldn’t keep up any longer.

We passed out to a drizzle plinking beats in the tin roof overhead and awoke in just enough time to make another pass around the island before savoring our last moments in Lanyu with the guest family that evening.

Travel Geek: Documentary Taiwan Out now!

At long last, the film has been edited, finalized and uploaded.

And here it is:

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Original YouTube description:

Follow Cyle O’Donnell, the Travel Geek, along more than 5,000 miles of trains, cars motorbikes, planes and boats — not to mention 20-or-so miles of hiking — through Far East Asia’s hidden gem. With filming spanning more than nine months, this trek covers everything from Chinese New Year in Tainan’s fireworks battle to Changhua’s legendary Lantern Festival; from windsurfing Penghu’s gale-force winds to eating raw pigs with Lanyu’s aboriginal natives; from high atop Taipei’s tallest towers, to the hinterland of tribal Taroko Gorge, this ultimate travel documentary is sure to inspire the mind and ignite the travel lust.

Travel Geek Documentary Taiwan has taken more than a year to complete. In the cutting room, the editors spent two-and-a-half months sifting through 114 Gigabytes worth of files spread out among 2,866 fils from 68 folders. And when it was finished, the final cut was one-hour-and-59-minutes long with more than four hours of outtakes, extra footage including marketing and subscriber media.

The experience of living and filming in Taiwan was amazing. And during the time the I spent in Taiwan, I also visited North and South Korea, Hong Kong, Macau, Thailand and the Philippines. So this film is the culmination of much enjoyment and success. And throughout this time, I also changed a lot as a media professional, a photographer and even as a person.

It’s bittersweet to see this particular film released because in addition to finalizing the edits and releasing it, I have also closed off another important and learned time in my life. And as I watch this film, I can’t help but be nostalgic and reflective of all the times in between the shots that no one else will feel quite so moved by but me. And while this film was captured before I left for film school (meaning, I didn’t have quite the gear that I have now in order to make it a little more “professional”), I still think it turned out pretty well.

In any case, it is my pleasure to announce the latest release of films in the Moving Stills library, Travel Geek: Documentary Taiwan. If you enjoy it half as much I did making it, I will be able to call it a success.

A special note just to subscribers is sent out that offers how to get free downloads and discounted packages of the Full-HD, 1080p version of this film, along with director’s notes, a signed script and the entire photo gallery that I shot from this trip.

Be sure to subscribe and get free stuff and inside tips from all my trips, and the videos that follow.

Please “Like,” Subscribe and share!!

More videos at https://www.cyleodonnell.com/films

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So you think you're busy?

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Many times I’ve wondered why so many people like to sit and complain about something and then, when the option comes for them to get up and do something about it, they remain seated and seem to come up with a reason that they are disinterested in action.  And this is after moaning and moaning about this thing or that stuff or “those people.”  And it was just so important that it’s worth taking up all that time and energy to talk about.

This is probably where phrases like “bark is bigger than bite,” and “walk the walk, or talk the talk” came from.  And it stands to reason that those doing the most talking, or barking as it were, do the least walking… or biting.

Well, I’m proud to say that I’m a biter.

Hey, before you put your head in the gutter, you know what I mean.  I’m talking about putting action behind my lust for adventure and for producing a world of media for us all to share.

When I was growing up, I always threatened to do things.  Normally they amounted to the more annoying things related to being a stubborn and unruly child.  But as my mother somberly recalls, I’d always actually do them.  So she grew to know my claims as solemn promises rather than empty threats.  And there have been only a few, very purposeful times in my life where this has not been the trend.

I can’t recall if it was for the satisfaction, or if it was my plan all along.  But I like to think that I have always been a man of action because this is just something we should all embrace: doing what we say we will do.

Having said that, I have always talked about the traveling and the writing and the photography that I’d someday publish.  And I always knew that I’d be doing it, too.  But until I started traveling, all I could do was fantasize.  Of course, my family traveled a lot when I was younger.  And I got to see a lot of the states.  But when I’d write in my journal or take my video camera and make little mini-movies with my brother, they would always be firmly grounded in our current location.

And so I’d wait.  Wait until the time of my life when I could finally break free from the shackles of normality and trade the mundane for the magical.

And I have realized with growing profundity over the course of the last nine years that I have finally made good on my youthful promises.  I’ve finally been able to climb over this giant challenge that I made to myself (and indeed to the world I’d consigned myself to explore) when I was younger.  And I have gone out into the world, produced a heap of photos, published several books and made a library of movies — all while traveling and seeing the grand planet that I knew was out there when I was a kid.

Why this whimsical trip down memory lane in an otherwise travel-focused blog?  Well, apart from releasing the blogs in January, I have been focusing on my latest film.  And along with taking up much of the time that I’d normally be blogging, it’s taken a lot of effort, too.

So much effort, in fact, that I have not gotten much sleep since the turn of the new year.  And the process for this film started even farther back than that.

In the last year, I spent nine months gathering footage for my feature length film in Taiwan. In doing so, I covered more than 5,000 miles on trains, cars, motorbikes, planes and boats — not to mention 20-or-so miles of hiking — while gathering 70-plus hours of footage, on which I spent the last two-and-a-half months and hundreds of hours cutting, composing, recutting and editing so that I could release it by the due date of February 28 (the official anniversary of the last day of filming).

And in that time, I’ve sifted through 114 Gigabytes worth of data spread out across 2,866 files from 68 folders of completely original media; and composed and added 15 musical themes and 215 soundtracks; all to produce one full length, two-hour film and more than four hours of extras and outtakes.

And this is in addition to editing dozens of photos, revamping two websites, editing 50-plus pages of my latest book, keeping up with this blog and shooting two weeks worth of footage for future media productions here in Malaysia.

In my personal life, last but not least, I was dealing with a lengthy personal challenge, moving halfway around the world and getting a job working as a college professor in a new place with very limited accommodations and still being expected to be at work on time and perform as I would under much less demanding circumstances.

Whew! Now THAT’S busy!

In any case, I’ve finished the film as of 9:30 last night.  And I am now awaiting the first render to finalize, which takes about 16 hours on my computer.  I will watch it for the first time in its completed form tonight and check for errors, transitional problems, good flow and all the other things that a good director should be watching for.

And when I am satisfied that it is worthy of the global audience, I’ll be releasing one more of my childhood dreams to the world.

I am very excited about this latest release.  It will be twice as long as my longest documentary to date.  And while that’s not necessarily a good thing in today’s fast paced, watch-on-the-go, five-minute YouTube videos, at the very least it will hold the potential to bring me into the realm of serious travelers and respected documentary filmmakers.  And that’s the exciting part — among all the other very fulfilling parts that come along with the finality of a year-long project.

This latest film was captured more like a journal than either of my two preceding films.  It wound up being 1:58 (1hr & 58m) and I was the only camera operator for most of the footage.  So many of the shots are handheld, pointed at myself and I even had to coordinate shot sequences so that I could later edit with that sequence in mind.  So not only did this project require a lot of forethought and planning, but it was also the result of a lot of introspection and taking lessons from what I learned in my journals and my previous filming expeditions.  I wanted that “gonzo journalist” style in this latest one.  And I think that my planning helped me achieve that.

And while I did keep journals from all of the places and experiences in this film, I never released them here on my blog.  So this latest doc also has a sense of nostalgia in that I am able to blog through one of my videos.  Trust me; it has the personal touch that comes through in this blog.  So I am happy to finally see it come to life.

As always, the film will be available for free as a 720/30p YouTube video.  But if you’d like to purchase a Full High Definition 1080p copy, it will come with all of the extra short films that were created, many outtakes that were not used in the feature, lots of HDR photos and trip journals.  And because you’re a subscriber of this blog or because you are subscribed to my YouTube channel or follow me on Twitter or Facebook, you’ll also get all the production photos, planning and script notes, a PDF of a signed script (originals available) and photos from the road that will never appear online.  It’s all ready for immediate download; all for $8.99!

Please visit the Travel Geek: Documentary Taiwan film page for more details and to view extras from the trip.  And when the film becomes available, I will update the blog and post the final details.

Thanks to those of you who have commented, shared, sent feedback throughout the filming and subscribed to my YouTube channel.  I hope you continue to share, comment and enjoy these as much as I enjoy making them.  I like knowing that I have created something for people to share and that makes the world a little bit better during the time that I happened to have visited.

Journal 54: Back from Macau

So I just returned from the Macau and Hong Kong trip and I feel like I have been walking through the desert for weeks.  I can’t believe how exhausted I am.  I don’t know if it’s because I am getting older or because the area is so small that visitors feel they can walk the entire thing and not be completely wasted afterward.

But I can assure you, I am completely wasted.

Having said that, though, I can also say that I have seen the entirety of what Macau has to offer and, as always, I enjoyed my time in Hong Kong.

I only spent one day in Hong Kong this time, but it was great to get out and do a photo-walk of my favorite places thereabouts.

I visited an old friend in the market north on Nathan Road and I got to do one of my favorite things on Hong Kong Island, which was to ride the double-decker buses and shoot the views from above.  And I even ate at one of my coveted places – Agave.

I haven’t eaten good Mexican food in a long time.  So it was a welcomed visit to the restaurant.

As always, it was very expensive.  But I think that I came away with some great experiences.  And the film that is currently in post-production will be released soon – hopefully by Sunday.

Well, this is just a short journal to highlight the upcoming media from the trip.  And I also wanted to make the point of apologizing that I have not been able to release my book as planned.

I guess I just bit off more than I could chew with everything going on and also trying to stay on top of the release.  I will hopefully be able to squeeze it in there with all my edits (photo and film) for the upcoming documentary.

And then, of course, there’s the long-awaited Taiwan Documentary that I have been filming for and working on since January this year (2012).

So there’s lots happening.  And I hop that this weekend greets you all well and that I can get this film out, get the book released, give away my free copies to all promised recipients and then get on to finishing the Taiwan documentary.

Until then, I will be steadily and dedicatedly working!

Headed for Macau

Greetings all.

As the journals from the Philippines unfold, I will be headed to yet another filming trip in the Chinese Special Administration Region (SAR) of Macau.  I hope to be taking a chopper over to Hong Kong.  But that might not be in the cards.  But that might pale in comparison to the plans I have for diving off the tallest bungee experience in the world — the Macau Tower.

The video below details the gear that I will be bringing along for the ride and using for filming, blogging and hopefully releasing a video while I’m there.

The journals from the Philippines will still be released.  In fact, the last journal is slated for April 4 at 1pm EST.  So at that point I should be prepped to announce the book release and be finished with all the journals from the Southeast Asia portion of the blog.

Far East Asia is being filmed and documented now and I hope to have much more of that by the end of the year.  But until then, enjoy the rest of the SEA journals and I will see you stateside!
[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fRBpoW4R-cU&w=1280&h=720]