Las Vegas Strip, High Speed + Cartoon Filter: "Sketches of Vegas" Panasonic DMC-ZS15
more at
http://news.quickfound.net/cities/las_vegas
.html
Scenes of automobile and pedestrian traffic on
Las Vegas Boulevard South (
The Strip) shot with a
Panasonic Lumix DMC-ZS15 compact superzoom pocket camera at 1920x1080, 30 fps progressive, 20mbps, then accelerated to four times normal speed with the NewBlue Cartoonr video plugin by NewBlueFX applied while editing in
Sony Vegas.
The music is "
Ninth Ward Festival-Variation B" included royalty-free with Sony Vegas.
Most of the shots were taken between Sands-Spring
Mountain and Tropicana.
The Fashion Show Mall,
Palazzo,
Venetian,
Mirage,
Caesar's Palace,
Bally's MGM Grand, and
New York, New York are seen in the film.
The final shot of feet walking was taken at 1280x720, 60 progressive, and rendered in 2.5 times slow motion.
A $13 Ravelli APLT2 49" tripod was used as a steadicam for this shot, holding in front of my feet as I walked, obtaining an upside-down image which was inverted while editing.
Panasonic Lumix DMC-ZS15 playlist:
http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL_hX5wLdhf_Laf9yJV2a0x7r4C_YbRThC
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Las_Vegas_Strip
The Las Vegas Strip is an approximately 4.2-mile (6.
8 km) stretch of Las Vegas Boulevard South in
Clark County, Nevada. The Strip is not located within the
City of Las Vegas but it passes through the unincorporated towns of
Paradise and
Winchester, which are south of the
Las Vegas city limits. Most of the
Strip has been designated an
All-American Road.
Many of the largest hotel, casino and resort properties in the world are located on the
Las Vegas Strip.
Fifteen of the world's 25 largest hotels by room count are on the Strip, with a total of over 62,
000 rooms.
One of the most visible aspects of Las Vegas' cityscape is its use of dramatic architecture. The modernization of hotels, casinos, restaurants, and residential high-rises on the Strip has established the city as one of the most popular destinations for tourists
...
The first casino to be built on
Highway 91 was the Pair-o-Dice
Club in 1931, but the first on what is currently the Strip was the
El Rancho Vegas, opening on April 3,
1941, with 63 rooms. That casino stood for almost 20 years before being destroyed by a fire in 1960. Its success spawned a second hotel on what would become the Strip, the
Hotel Last Frontier, in
1942.
Organized crime figures such as
New York's Bugsy Siegel took interest in the growing gaming center leading to other resorts such as the
Flamingo, which opened in 1946, and the
Desert Inn, which opened in
1950. The funding for many projects was provided through the
American National Insurance Company, which was based in the then notorious gambling empire of
Galveston, Texas...
In
1968,
Kirk Kerkorian purchased the Flamingo and hired
Sahara Hotels
Vice President Alex Shoofey as
President. Alex Shoofey brought along 33 of Sahara's top executives.
The Flamingo was used to train future employees of the
International Hotel, which was under construction.
Opening in
1969, the International Hotel, with 1,512 rooms, began the era of mega-resorts.
The International is known as the
LVH today.
The first
MGM Grand Hotel and Casino, also a
Kerkorian property, opened in
1973 with 2,
084 rooms...
The opening of
The Mirage in
1989 set a new level to the Las Vegas experience, as smaller hotels and casinos made way for the larger mega-resorts. These huge facilities offer entertainment and dining options, as well as gambling and lodging. This change affected the smaller, well-known and now historic hotels and casinos, like The
Dunes,
The Sands, the
Stardust, and the Sahara...