mitchman:
I wouldn't have any unmanned cameras. The cars move to fast for them to be static. Maybe the overhead camera could be static (if it's even possible....helicopter?)
You would probably interview drivers after their runs, but if appropriate you might interview them before as well. Lots of different options here.
This is fun to talk about, but I have no idea how you would garner the funds/SCCA support/etc...to make it happen.
step 1: find out what is of interest to the potential victims - and this discussion is most helpful even at this early stage
step 2: find out what (if anything) is of interest to potential sponsors
step 3: see if there is sufficient overlap between 1 and 2 to contain a feasible effort
If we get to 3, then it's time for a straw proposal to try and codify a consensus....
A long road, but no hurry...
Y'all gravitate quickly to a format that sounds to me rather like a serious effort to produce a single event - the sort of approach I see with any major motorsports competition that has an established audience. Perhaps that's it...
I keep thinking about who the audience is for this. If I take the current Solo community as the audience then the single event format makes sense to me, as we all know how the sport is conducted and could enjoy the show.
But if the audience is only secondarily ourselves, then this project would have to contain some education, and to attain that a "hook" would have to be crafted... One "hook" might be the conversion of a street racer - would anyone here admit to graduating from street to Solo? Is such a progression just urban legend? Who among you has not chuckled quietly at the appearance of an uber-street machine driven by a novice - who suddenly discovers that Solo is hard? Has anyone that passed that test and persevered, ever tempted a protege to follow suit?
I'm grasping in all directions here, and only due to a sense that securing sponsorship on an appropriate scale must include not only good PR for the SCCA and potentially some product placement for corporate backers, but also educate and seduce the potential participants in our sport.
This is due to my sense that a production that is not just a showcase but also an effective recruiting message will garner the most support - with safety a visible and critical component of the pitch.
Please do toss out more ideas, as I would cheerfully wallpaper a room with them if I had enough, and use that as a starting point for refinement.
Charlie Thompson
'04 JCW Cooper [STX]
NER Cannon Fodder