Button Cues on eos.

Hi all,

I'm relatively new to lighting design and this might just be one of those things that you should be expected to know but I'm not exactly sure what a button cue is. From what I've gathered its at the end of a number or act and everything goes sort of flashy. I was also wondering if I should apply a block and an assert to this cue. That's just what someone has told me. I'm also not quite sure what a block and assert is either and that would be really helpful if someone could confirm that for me. Thanks and sorry for the long question.

-samkphx

Parents
  • A button is the "ta-da" at the end (or near the end) of a musical number or song. Usually accompanied by a final pose by the singer(s).

    I wouldn't necessarily say that it "goes flashy" - usually it is a brighter bump up of the lights but a static look. But those are design decisions...

    As to why you would block and assert the cue, that's because it is the end of the song and it's a good idea to block and assert the beginning and end of songs or scenes.

    Block is an editing flag that you apply to a cue and it says "changes stop before here" - so if you make a change in a cue before the blocked cue, the change will not track into your blocked cue. check out this video: https://youtu.be/pe72DB_UTLM?list=PLl-Ao0hIFwH8e-hREGygP-ZuskSPY50NZ

    Assert is another flag that you apply to a cue and it says "play back this cue so that it always looks the same" - it grabs any channels in the cue that are also in other cue lists or other fading cues and makes them fade with the asserted cue. Check out this video: https://youtu.be/NUQnDD_8ncM?list=PLl-Ao0hIFwH8e-hREGygP-ZuskSPY50NZ

    -Todd

Reply
  • A button is the "ta-da" at the end (or near the end) of a musical number or song. Usually accompanied by a final pose by the singer(s).

    I wouldn't necessarily say that it "goes flashy" - usually it is a brighter bump up of the lights but a static look. But those are design decisions...

    As to why you would block and assert the cue, that's because it is the end of the song and it's a good idea to block and assert the beginning and end of songs or scenes.

    Block is an editing flag that you apply to a cue and it says "changes stop before here" - so if you make a change in a cue before the blocked cue, the change will not track into your blocked cue. check out this video: https://youtu.be/pe72DB_UTLM?list=PLl-Ao0hIFwH8e-hREGygP-ZuskSPY50NZ

    Assert is another flag that you apply to a cue and it says "play back this cue so that it always looks the same" - it grabs any channels in the cue that are also in other cue lists or other fading cues and makes them fade with the asserted cue. Check out this video: https://youtu.be/NUQnDD_8ncM?list=PLl-Ao0hIFwH8e-hREGygP-ZuskSPY50NZ

    -Todd

Children
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