The Music Video Guy Podcast
We just hit a massive milestone of 200,000 followers, and to celebrate, Carla and I sat down for our first in-person recording with the man who helped start our obsession: director and Emmy nominee Quark Henares. We’re geeking out over the legendary Directors Label DVDs, the technical jump from MiniDV tapes to RED cameras, and the digital era that defined the 2000s OPM scene. Quark breaks down the "Pantheon" of directors—pitting Michel Gondry’s puzzles against Spike Jonze’s subversion and Mark Romanek’s technical reverence. With the rise of vertical video and AI-perfect imagery, do you think the "Golden Age" of music videos is permanently archived, or are we just entering a new, messier evolution? Listen to the full interview on The Music Video Guy Podcast, and Join our Discord or Support me on Patreon! Other Information: * The "Ateneo Brat Pack" (later known as the Prod Madnezz collective) was a group of students from the 2004-2006 batches who carved out a niche in music videos while the local film and commercial industries were still heavily gatekept. * Michael Jackson’s "Scream" (1995) remains the benchmark for "Cash Equity" in music videos, largely because modern stars like Taylor Swift do not publicize the specific production budgets for high-end projects like "Bad Blood." * Quark Henares’ favorite Mark Romanek video is "Rain" by Madonna, which he notes features Romanek himself playing the role of the director within the visual narrative. #MusicVideoAnalysis #QuarkHenares #TheMusicVideoGuy #AteneoBratPack #Filmmaking #Director #90sNostalgia #MusicPodcast
7 episodios
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