RUBE GOLDBERG – POST #2
I built my Rube Goldberg machine in no time, surely, that was pretty easy. Now, the hard part was filming(my god, it was so, so, so frustrating). I filmed with my mom’s phone, no problem. But, my mom would sometimes complain about me filming for too long. I had to film every single try, each try seemed to have some problems that I thought would work. When building from your sketch, you wouldn’t realize that some parts actually won’t work. To think of it, you have to know reality. When I was building, I kept on telling myself: reality, Cindy, think of reality. I finished filming in 2 days(that was 2 frustrating days), and I took a little break from that hard work.
Designing: no problem at all! Designing was easy, just think of it, drawing a probably-not-going-to-work sketch is super duper easy. I had millions and millions of ideas already swirling in my mind, now I need support on which one to pick. I watched some past student videos(Heathcote Tech). But when I watched a video on a cat feeder, from Joseph’s Machines, there we go, cat feeder it is.
I learned something super important from this project: you cannot assume that your sketch will work. First of all, the sketch will not be the same unless you make it short and simple, and reality-like. My machine turned out completely different, I even had to change the simple task that it does at the end. I also realized that some parts needed to be changed and that some parts really couldn’t work, like, the end. I tried it out, just the last step, but unfortunately, it doesn’t work. The pulley I made didn’t work either. Lots of things didn’t work the way I expected it to be.
My experience with making the video was much more fun than filming, especially because it lets me do whatever I want! Although I didn’t like the downloading part(It absolutely made me bust into frustration). Making videos was something I always enjoyed(not very), but what I most liked is how the whole video came out. I love watching it over and over again, such a nice experience.
There were a lot of frustrating parts, especially when building this machine. So many things needed to be changed and it was really hard to build the whole thing with utterly nothing(but cardboard, tape, dominos, and balls). When filming the machine, the most frustrating part was setting up the dominos over and over again. It kept on knocking over each other and setting the machine off when it was not supposed to. Every time I had to keep on setting it up multiple times. Although it was frustrating, I loved the surprise I gained when I saw the cage was open.
I really enjoyed this unit, not the part where we had to film, but it was amazing. It was much better than the other units we did in the past. It really made my creativity spark in the way I made my machine. I’m quite proud that I produced and filmed and made everything(as you can see, on the credits, everything is made by me). I thought this unit was very fun and I wish we will be able to do something like this more often.
Final Sketch
WeVideo