Speaking of the 10th District and all things new media, I was on the panel for this month’s GA Politics Podcast. Here’s the audio from that:

I think the discussion was great in this episode, much more conversational than it’s often been. It was recorded at our place just by setting our portable recorder down on the coffee table (as was the newest episode of North Fulton Drama Club). It got me thinking about how to set up for audio recording in our new place.

I want to run with the sitting around the coffee table, forget-the-mic-is-there set-up. I think we can do this with one or two boundary microphones, plugged straight into the recorder or through a USB interface into a laptop. This would be less complicated and expensive than lapel mics, and I’m kind of over the novelty of having an imposing-looking sound set-up if it’s going to be a lot of effort to deal with. I’m eying the Shure MX393. Anyone have any experience with this microphone or any others in the Microflex series they can share?

There are very obvious issues with echoes and noise in the new place. Some of that will be worked out when we install curtains sometime in the next few weeks, and I’m also planning to buy and/or make some portable freestanding noise-absorption panels and bass traps at some point pretty soon.

We toyed with the idea of making our vault into a studio, but that isn’t going to work, at least not as a place for frequent recordings. There’s not enough ventilation. The sound isolation is better there, so it may yet still be used as a place for voiceover-type stuff (ideal when making fake commercials).

But, the point is, I had a hell of a lot of fun not having to play sound engineer this time out. Thanks to Joseph, his panelists, the NFDC crew, and everyone else for making our first party in three or four months awesome.

UPDATE: Courtesy of SpaceyG, it’s the pale white guys’ legs show!

Five minutes worth of it anyway. We were one ethernet cable away from a live broadcast over uStream. Month-after-next we’re hoping to give it another shot.