Toronto events!!!

Toronto Fun Parties

Tuesday, April 26, 2016

YouTube opens space for video creators in Toronto

YouTube TorontoToronto's first YouTube Space is tucked away in alleyway off near Richmond and Sherbourne (it's at 230 Richmond St. E., to be exact). And that's fitting considering it's part of the the George Brown College campus.

youtube torontoThe 3,500 square foot facility gives YouTube creators a professional studio where they can access high-quality camera equipment - including 360 and virtual reality cameras - lights, a sound stage and sets.

YouTube Space Toronto sound stageGeorge Brown students helped design the open concept space. It's heavily branded with YouTube's ubiquitous colour scheme, but also includes nods to our city, especially in Studio 1.

YouTube Space Toronto muralThis pre-set room includes murals by Runt (you know, the artist who painted Lee's Palace) as well as various pieces of Canadiana kitsch, like old snowshoes and skis, which announce that this is indeed Canada's very first YouTube Space.

YouTube Space Toronto couchThe studio will likely change its look quarterly, but at press time, it features a bar area, a concert stage and a cozy-looking couch area.

YouTube Space TorontoWhen I visit, Studio 2 is relatively bare, but it's filled with Google Cardboard goggles as well as VR (virtual reality) and 360 cameras, giving creators an opportunity to experiment with these emerging technologies and cinematic techniques.

YouTube Space Toronto barCreators with more than 10,000 subscribers can book out equipment and all of the sound stages and studio. However, even those with fewer followers can access the space and anyone can sign up to learn from some our city's most well known YouTubers at workshops and events.

YouTube Space TorontoAnd Toronto is home to some pretty well-known YouTubers. Photos of JusReign (Jasmeet Singh), LaurDIY (Lauren Riihimaki) and The Domestic Geek (Sara Lynn Cauchon) lines the wall and boast about their enormous followings. Instead of traveling to YouTube Spaces in cities such as New York or Los Angeles, local vloggers can now work from home and collaborate with one another.

YouTube Space Toronto"This is amazing because we are all creators and we work in isolated situations throughout the city," says Greg Brown who runs the enormously popular AsapSCIENCE channel along with Mitch Moffit. "But now," he continues, "there's a place where we can actually come together and hang out."YouTube Space Toronto

Photos by Hector Vasquez.


by Amy Grief via blogTO

No comments:

Post a Comment