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180 Litton Drive
Grass Valley, CA 95945
United States

AJA Video

Since 1993, AJA Video has been a leading manufacturer of video interface technologies, converters, digital video recording solutions and professional cameras, bringing high-quality, cost-effective products to the professional broadcast, video, post production and ProAV markets. AJA products are designed and manufactured in Grass Valley, California.
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BCC Live on Transforming Client Ideas Into Realities
Posted on Monday, January 22, 2024
BCC Live on Transforming Client Ideas Into Realities

Jan. 22, 2024 - Boulder, Colorado-based BCC Live may have gotten its start in information technology (IT) but has quickly evolved into a live production powerhouse. Committed to ensuring customers’ success, the company thrives on solving the most difficult broadcast and live stream challenges for customers across the globe. BCC Live President Dave Downey recently sat down with us to tell us about the difficulties his team faces in the field and how they’re using AJA BRIDGE LIVE to support a broad range of encoding/decoding demands for clients spanning niche sporting events like the IRONMAN Triathlon and Rock n Roll Marathon through to corporate video productions. 

Tell us a little bit about yourself.

I’m President of the company, but I am also an event technician. I initially studied video production in college back in the early 90s, then started up BCC Live. As I learned more about video production and broadcasting, the company thrived, and here we are today. 

What’s BCC Live’s backstory? 

We started out as an IT company. Then, one day, we got a call from the IRONMAN Triathlon to install their phone system. Once we completed the project, they asked if we could do audio for events. We started tagging along to their triathlons to support audio and eventually picked up video. About eight years ago, they asked us to help with their IRONMAN Frankfurt broadcast. After that, we continued supporting broadcasts for them, and in 2017, we took over all their global broadcasts. Since then, we’ve continued to gain more clients in the space. 

Describe the services you offer. 

We provide soup-to-nuts services spanning production through post, including animation and graphics – largely for more niche sporting events but also some corporate clients. Most often, we’re working with production companies who are capturing live event footage on motorcycles. Our team receives the live feeds, then mixes that content, adds graphics, and broadcasts it out to millions of viewers via YouTube, Outside+, or another online video platform. In short, we deliver TV-caliber broadcasts for web consumption. 

Outside of IRONMAN, what other clients do you work with? 

We also work with the Health Industry Distributors of America. We started collaborating with them during the pandemic and still help them produce conference broadcasts throughout the year. We’ve also done a lot of production work with the Colorado Rapids Youth Soccer program. We record coaching sessions (both in-person and on-site) and post produce them, and then they put them on Vimeo for on-demand viewing.

What does an average project entail for your team?

Every project is so different, but we kick off every project by ensuring all the right people, assets, and equipment are in place for the job. For instance, when we did a production in Finland last year, we had to figure out how to get our equipment through customs and on the ground and enlist the right people locally. We then built out custom graphics to make the event feel special. Once we were ready to execute, we made sure the broadcast workflow and internet setup would hold up. Then, we packaged the content to a more palatable time span, condensing a five-hour broadcast into 45-second highlights for social media platforms like Instagram. Everything we broadcast or produce, regardless of where it takes place in the world, comes into our Boulder studio and is then distributed out to viewing platforms. 

Tell us more about the technologies you’re using across client projects. 

We started using AJA BRIDGE LIVE in 2023 to replace an encoding solution that was going to be EOLed (end of life). Our former solution didn't do everything we needed it to, so we used the EOL news as an opportunity to evaluate the latest encoders/decoders. This is how BRIDGE LIVE came across our radar. After learning about it, we did a demo, and in 15 minutes, we were sold. We knew it could solve a lot of problems for us and would do nearly everything we’d need. And when we got the device, we quickly realized its full value.  

We use BRIDGE LIVE almost every weekend, whether for testing or broadcasting. All our clients work in different locations, each with different broadcast environments and deliverable requirements – be it 1080i or 1080p, 50 or 60 frames, SRT (Secure Reliable Transport), etc. – and BRIDGE LIVE allows us to take in nearly any type of feed and send out whatever end format is needed. With it, we can also send SCTE markers to customers more intuitively so we can trigger ads on their end. BRIDGE LIVE has significantly reduced the volume of equipment we use every day. It allows us to go in and build a new profile for any project, and we’re then set for the broadcast without a lot of stress and trouble.

You mentioned SRT. How much demand are you seeing for it?

We see a lot more requests for SRT now. In fact, last year, it was probably the most popular request, but we still see a lot of interest in RTMP. Of course, we also use SDI and NDI a lot. BRIDGE LIVE supports them all. One of the reasons we love using NDI with BRIDGE LIVE is that we don't have to get up from our seats to send the signal in the studio; on my laptop, I can easily pop it open in NDI, see it, do a quality check, and then go into the studio and pull it into the TriCaster and make sure everything is the way I want. Then, I can patch it and set it up as SDI, so whenever we need it in multiple places, rather than routing the SDI through, we can use a matrix splitter so multiple studios can grab it off NDI. It’s a really simple way to split off a world feed right as we get it. We can put it on our network with NDI and then have each studio grab what they need from it.

How are you using SCTE ad insertion markers with BRIDGE LIVE? 

For 70.3 IRONMAN competition broadcasts, Outside TV often runs the ad breaks. To make the process seamless, we send them SCTE ad insertion markers – leaning heavily on BRIDGE LIVE’s ability to send that SCTE metadata down to the broadcast channels – which they use to trigger ad breaks on their end. 

Can you walk us through a project workflow? 

For a lot of the IRONMAN events in Europe, we work with a production company that gives us a live premix feed with natural sound that doesn’t include graphics. Our Boulder studio receives that feed via BRIDGE LIVE, and it’s pulled into our video mixer via SDI and sent to a few different destinations in our studio. We first send it to our replay machine, grab the feed that the BRIDGE LIVE is spitting out, and then send it into our TriCaster via SDI, which is where we add in HTML5 graphics. We use a green screen background and then put video behind the hosts so it looks like they are in the location of the event. Our team sends that out via BRIDGE LIVE to YouTube, Facebook, and Outside for the viewers to see, as well as to Grabyo, where our client can pull content for social needs.

Next, we spin off a world feed that we send to LiveU Studio and also transmit a mixed feed to LiveU Studio from the BRIDGE LIVE. In LiveU Studio, we might bring in remote French hosts, mix in localized content, and send that off to L'Équipe. We’ve also done the same scenario but sent the feed to other destinations like Portuguese TV.

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