Feature Stories

Samsung Galaxy Note Review

Sony NEX-7 Review

Motorola Pro+ 4G

Google Galaxy Nexus

LG Optimus LTE

HTC Raider

Apple iPhone 4S

Samsung Galaxy S II X 

Acer Iconia Tab A100 7"

Sony Tablet S 16GB WiFi

 

Samsung Galaxy Tab 10.1 4G Review

HTC Flyer Review

BlackBerry PlayBook Review

Motorola XOOM Review

Google Nexus S Review

Apple iPad 2 Review

10-inch tablet shootout!

Recent Visits

 

Search

Recent Reviews 

Cygnett Apollo Hybrid iPhone 4 case

Dell XPS 14Z Notebook

OlloClip Quick Connect Lens for iPhone 4

Kogeto dot 360' iPhone lens

FujiFilm X10 Camera

ClamCase Keyboard Case for iPad 2 

Toshiba Satellite Z830 Ultrabook

Nikon CoolPix S1200pj camera

Evolution Robotics Mint Plus Robot Cleaner

Acer S3 Ultrabook 

Freehand Powerstretch 5 Gloves

Kobo Vox Reader

Sony NEX-7 camera

Freehand Powerstretch 5 gloves

Toshiba Satellite Z830 Ultrabook

Acer S3 Ultrabook

Mint Plus Robotic Cleaner

Samsung Galaxy Nexus

HTC Raider

HTC Jetstream Tablet with LTE

LG Optimus LTE smartphone

Panasonic Lumix GF3 M43 Camera

Sandisk Memory Vault 16GB

Forza Motorsport 4

GarageBand for iPhone/iPod

Apple iPhone 4S

Olympus E-PL3 Micro Four Thirds camera

Nokia X7 Symbian Smartphone

Samsung Galaxy S II X Hercules

LG Optimus 2X Android smartphone

16GB Lexar Echo USB ZX backup drive

Kobo Reader Touch Edition

Apple MacBook Air 11-Inch (2011)

Bracketron Back-It iPad Case

Sony Ericsson Xperia mini pro

Samsung Galaxy S II 4G 

Fujifilm XP20 camera

Samsung NPQX411 Notebook

LG Optimus Black Skype Edition

HP TouchPad Tablet

Kobo Reader Touch Edition

Toshiba Camileo BW10 video camera

Otterbox Defender Series 

21" inch iMac with Quad Core i5 processors

HTC Wildfire S

Aviiq SmartCase for iPad 2

Blaq Twitter app for RIM PlayBook

Motorola DEFY smartphone

Samsung Series 9 Notebook

HTC Flyer 7" inch Android Tablet

Fujifilm F550EXR 16 Megapixel GPS camera

Lapdock notebook dock for ATRIX

Motorola ATRIX smartphone

Casio TRYX Camera

BlackBerry PlayBook

Motorola XOOM WiFi Android Tablet

3 Canadian TV iPad apps

Samsung SH100 WiFi enabled camera

Nokia C7 Symbian smartphone

HTC Incredible S smartphone

Samsung NX100 digital camera

TomTom GO 2505 GPS

Kodak Pulse W1030 digital frame

Google Nexus S smartphone

Apple iPad 2

Samsung 650 Series 55-inch HDTV

Samsung Galaxy S Fascinate smartphone

iSkin ProTouch Classic keyboard protector

Lexmark Genesis all-in-one printer

Toshiba Libretto W100 subnotebook

HTC HD7 Windows Phone

Mac App Store

Kinect Adventures on Xbox 360

Toshiba 46WX800U LED 3D HDTV

Incipio Feather Case for MacBook Air

Samsung SF510 Notebook

HP Photosmart eStation C510

Microsoft Kinect

HP Palm Pre 2

MacBook Air 13-inch (2010)

Boomphones headphones

Mophie Juice Pack Air for iPhone 4

Incipio hard case for Samsung Galaxy Tab

Victorinox Flash Flight Alox drive

Kindle 3 Leather Cover

Samsung EX1 10 Megapixel camera

Acer Aspire 13.3 inch notebook

Sony Alpha A55 DSLR

Gran Turismo 5 (PS3)

Sony Bloggie Touch 

XM SkyDock iPod/iPhone adapter

Apple TV (2010)

iPad apps: Aweditorium

HTC Desire Z Android smartphone

Nokia N8 Symbian smartphone

RIM BlackBerry Torch

Motorola i1 push-to-talk Android Phone

LG Optimus 7 Windows Phone

Samsung Galaxy Tab Android Tablet

Toshiba Tecra R700 notebook

Kobo Wireless eReader

HTC Surround

Windows Phone 7 smartphone OS

Netflix streaming video service

Office for the Mac 2011

Apple MacBook Air (Late 2010)

Nokia C6 Symbian Smartphone

HP Photosmart D100a printer

Incipio Premium Kindle 3 Case

Amazon Kindle 3

iSkin Solo case for iPhone 4

iSkin Revo 4 Case for iPhone 4

CityTV Video App for the iPad

Sony Ericsson Experia X10 Mini

iPod Nano 6th Gen

Sony Ericsson Xperia X10

Samsung Galaxy S Vibrant

Apple iPhone 4 

Motorola FLIPOUT on Rogers

Samsung NX 10 Hybrid mirrorless Camera

Olympus E-PL1 Micro Four Thirds Camera

Four iPhone 4 Cases in $30 range

iPhone 4 Ballistic HC series case

Sharp Quattron LE810 HDTV

Coverage

« iTunes Store Tops 10 Billion Songs Sold | Main | Joby Unveils New Gorrillapods at PMA »
Wednesday
Feb242010

Canadian designed lasers light up the Super Bowl XLIV halftime show

Phoro by Touchdown Entertainment Inc, / Brad Dun
The Super Bowl half-time performance has become one of the music industry’s highest profile events, with recent acts such as Prince, U2, Greenday, Bruce Springsteen, Tom Petty, the Rolling Stones and Justin Timberlake and Janet Jackson plus Sir Paul McCartney taking part. Did you know that the pyro and the lasers were provided by a Canadian company called Pyrotek Special Effects? Read on and find out more about the awesome tech of big show effects.

For this year’s Super Bowl XLIV halftime show, The Who lit up the skies of Miami Sunday, February 7 at Sun Life Stadium performing a wide array of their classic hits. The legendary London band performed a medley including Baba O'Riley, Pinball Wizard, Who Are You and Won't Get Fooled Again.


Engaged in the massive production, Executive Producer Ricky Kirshner alongside with Director Hamish Hamilton pulled together a production crew of some of the industry’s best in staging, lighting, sound and special effects. Kishner & Hamilton introduced one of the most technical stage structures ever seen for a Super Bowl half-time show. Bruce Rodgers (Production Designer) of Tribe Inc worked along with his design team to draft the unique circular LED video stage that consisted of 14 set carts and an additional 26 radials around the main stage.

The creation of the stage at its conceptual design was a reflection of the Captain America Shield symbolizing a strong powerful patriotic influence that meshed with a Mercedes-Benz McLaren SLR Sterling Moss with all the built-in options of pyro, lasers and lights. From concept to reality, all departments worked out all the potential obstacles they would face in creating such a monstrous design that would need be assembled within 8 minutes during a commercial and commentary break. Introducing the lasers to the Super Bowl was a new facet.


Rob Paine (Executive in Charge of Production), contacted Laser Design Productions to conjure some of the possibilities of utilizing numerous lasers to create a huge effect for the half-time performance. Incorporating the latest technology in lasers, Designer and President of Laser Design Productions, Doug Adams, coordinated along with VictorTomei (Laser Technical Director) to project over 400 watts of power through sixteen laser sources that were located on the field and within the stage to achieve the looks Hamilton desired. After numerous meetings and site inspections, a number of obstacles and concerns were overcome in order to incorporate the lasers into the show.

Preparing for every possible and worst-case scenario, Tomei along with his team designed custom apparatuses including rain protection housings for each laser, anti vibrating platforms mounted to the white light lasers housed within the radial carts. Power requirements and additional generators to keep the lasers and foggers warm before rolling onto the field to go live were also taken into consideration.
Staging Supervisors, Cap Spence and Tony Hauser, assessed all divisions to strategically implement the load-in, setup and load-out with the full production crew plus approximately 600 volunteers. The logistics to coordinate this stage in such a short amount of time was an impressive feat, to say the least.

With a determination to advance the concept, the entire production team moved forward to choreograph the show moments into 12 minutes of music that was led by Hamish whose talent was clearly visible. The stage itself was a phenomenal structure with over 3000 five-foot radiating LED MiSTRIPs to project video content of graphic vibes, text and waves of light that crescendoed with blasts of pyro and laser beams to specific beats and cues.


Adams and his crew pre-programmed all 16 lasers at their head office studio. Working with Laser Programmer Jason McEachern, they took a new approach to test pilot a pre- visualization software program, Light Converse. It was a great new approach that allowed Adams and McEachern to program the lasers and make changes on and off- site with a visual reference. Laser Design Productions including a total of 16 lasers with an output of over 400 watts of laser light.

The equipment list included:
Four 50-watt Green YAG Lasers

Four 25- watt full color air cooled OPS Lasers

Two 20- watt full color air cooled OPS Lasers

Two 20- watt Full Color DPSS/Diode Lasers

Four 13- watt Full Color DPSS/Diode Lasers

Sixteen LDP 10 Projectors Sixteen Le Maitre G-Force 2 Foggers “range 110v”

Fourteen pangolin laser control cards were all networked at a central control under the main stage. Eight full color lasers were positioned in eight of the radial carts. Eight additional lasers including four 50-watt yags and four of the full-color air cooled lasers were located upstage of the New Orleans Saints (NFC) bench. Segueing into "Baba O'Riley," Adams designed a classic green laser look that was renowned from past Who performances.

Diffraction, machidda and beam chases filled the arena with lasers. Leading into the closing of Baba O’Riley, full color lasers were showcased as they transitioned into colors of purple, red, white, blue and even an amber/brown look choreographed in sequence with the lighting.


After all was said and done, the Super Bowl, and the NFL proved to once again show the world it is more than just a game. The Indianapolis Colts were upset by the New Orleans Saints. A city that was devastated on August 25th 2005 by Hurricane Katrina proudly showed the world that it was making a powerful comeback. According to preliminary results from the Nielsen Company, CBS’s broadcast of Super Bowl XLIV attracted an average audience of 106.5 million U.S. viewers, making it the most watched Super Bowl of all time.

 

References (6)

References allow you to track sources for this article, as well as articles that were written in response to this article.
  • Response
    Response: mgydufzr
    mgydufzr
  • Response
    Response: ewdyzzml
    ewdyzzml
  • Response
    Response: foczjzyy
    foczjzyy
  • Response
    Response: wpjoqpxy
    wpjoqpxy
  • Response
    Response: Hello
    Nice writing. I belive your page should come up much higher in the search results than where it is showing up right now.
  • Response
    [...]Canadian designed lasers light up the Super Bowl XLIV halftime show - Canadian Reviewer - News, Reviews and Opinion with a Canadian Perspective[...]

Reader Comments (1)

I do truly like your cool text! Can you accomplish the term research paper as example? Because I do really know that an experienced custom writing service could compose well researched term papers of prominent quality.

February 24, 2010 | Unregistered CommenterStephenson31Charity

PostPost a New Comment

Enter your information below to add a new comment.

My response is on my own website »
Author Email (optional):
Author URL (optional):
Post:
 
Some HTML allowed: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <code> <em> <i> <strike> <strong>