tourtelot Posted September 16 Report Share Posted September 16 Not judging your choice on a place to live. D. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Philip Perkins Posted September 16 Report Share Posted September 16 As a side note, I think it is important to bill equipment by type or category. IE a client wants a wireless package with a certain number of channels, possibly for a certain price. It's my call what I give them--I don't work for people who specify brands and models of gear I will be operating. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
PMC Posted September 16 Report Share Posted September 16 Tourtalot, I didn't take it that way. We are all friends here. Helping each other. I learn new things here frequently. I really appreciate the real world test of gear. Philip, I hear this a couple times each year, "No sennhieser wireless." LOL. I guess some producers have been burned by lack of range. I doubt they can hear the compander. BUT Sennheisers certainly don't pass the jingling key chain test. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
JonG Posted September 17 Report Share Posted September 17 On 9/15/2023 at 4:47 PM, tourtelot said: Just a sincere question. Does it make sense that an (in-town) producer would pay less in Iowa (for everything) than an in-town producer in LA? Actually since the markets in both LA and NYC are so over saturated, unless you’re doing big union jobs or high end commercials, most of the time they pay lower than out of town. It’s a common joke amongst those of us outside those markets to get a producer from either looking to crew up with locals and say “I can get xyz in LA for this rate” And of course they bring in everyone but sound from LA and they think they’re going to get a discount from a local lol Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
PMC Posted September 17 Report Share Posted September 17 Yup, JonG. I am a witness to that. Plus, in my early days of being a freelancer I had, on a couple of occasions, LA producers try to get my rate down only to find out that they were using me to drive the LA guy's rate down, who they really wanted to use. I played that game only twice until I wised up. I found out because I ended up day playing as an electrician on one of those gigs. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Johnny Karlsson Posted September 17 Report Share Posted September 17 2 hours ago, JonG said: t’s a common joke amongst those of us outside those markets to get a producer from either looking to crew up with locals and say “I can get xyz in LA for this rate” That’s just bs negotiation tactics. Just reply with “Sorry, but I don’t know any professional sound mixers that would do it for that”. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
tourtelot Posted September 17 Report Share Posted September 17 Yep, gotta agree with Johnny. "Just say no." D. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
JonG Posted September 17 Report Share Posted September 17 55 minutes ago, tourtelot said: Yep, gotta agree with Johnny. "Just say no." Always do Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Ridley Posted Friday at 02:49 AM Report Share Posted Friday at 02:49 AM On 9/15/2023 at 5:06 PM, JonG said: I’ve spoken with a lot of mixers all over the country, consulted many rate cards, and as of 2023 most people are charging $500/day for a basic package, that includes a mixer, two wireless, and a boom mic. Everything else is à la carte. Also most people are billing their day rate on a ten hour day instead of a 12. National average is $800/10h. Let’s make this normal. Does that $800 include the $500/day kit fee? Here in rural Canada I recently started charging $450 day rate + $250 kit ($700 CAD total). I've had to be flexible with other productions ($500 CAD total) to book some gigs. Basic kit includes 2x Wireless, 1x Boom, 1x Mixer, 2x IFBs, and timecode for 2 cameras. Anything above I will most likely start to charge more ($50 extra per wireless). Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Johnny Karlsson Posted Friday at 04:45 AM Report Share Posted Friday at 04:45 AM 1 hour ago, Ridley said: Does that $800 include the $500/day kit fee? Always keep the labor and equipment separate. That should be $850/10h day labor + $500/day for base package - Mixer/Recorder, 1x Boom Mic, 2x Wireless Lav Mic sets. I will include a TC Slate, or sync box for camera, but IFB is extra @ $50 for the Transmitter, and $25/ea per Receiver/Headset. Additional Wireless is $85/channel. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
JonG Posted Friday at 10:53 PM Report Share Posted Friday at 10:53 PM 20 hours ago, Ridley said: Does that $800 include the $500/day kit fee? No, those are separate Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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