Esports Production Forum: Inaugural Event Draws 380+ To Discuss Exhilarating Industry Sector

Fast-growing esports drives technological innovation in live production

SVG’s inaugural Esports Production Forum took over the Sheraton Universal Hotel in Los Angeles yesterday to explore how videogame publishers, esports leagues and venues, and live-streaming outlets are bringing an entirely new mindset to live sports production. More than 380 attendees representing a cross-section of the sports-production industry joined the Forum to learn from esports-production leaders about the state of the industry and how they produce and distribute esports content for a rapidly growing fan base.

It was standing-room-only at SVG’s Esports Production Forum in Los Angeles.

As the fastest growing live-sports sector, esports has also emerged as one of the biggest drivers of technological innovation for live production. Throughout the day, the art and craft of producing esports for fans around the world — and the technology behind the production — was the focus for the standing-room-only crowd.

In addition to a full slate of panel discussions and case studies, the day featured three keynote conversations with industry leaders. Yvette Martinez-Rea, CEO/managing director, ESL North America, described her entry into the esports industry and reflected on the fanbase and athletes that make up this sector.

“One of the fallacies about esports is that it’s one thing. It is not one thing,” she said. “It is more akin to track and field than it is to one sport: it is every game, every platform, every publisher. Start to multiply the different combinations, and it is enormously complicated.

“For those of you who are new to it,” she continued, “the biggest advice I can give is to approach it humbly and approach it with respect for how complicated it is, how talented some of these kids — and they are kids — are, and how sophisticated they actually are in their knowledge and in their skill set.”

In the second keynote, Turner Sports VP, Esports Products and Technology, Robert Occhialini shared his own lessons learned in transitioning from more-traditional sports to esports.

“One of the eye-opening things is just how much you have to ingest,” he said. “We do a lot of different games; we are not focused on a single game. This year, we’ve done a bunch, and that means that my team and I need to know a lot about a lot of different games. And, in order to figure out what fan-engagement experiences to build on the digital side and what ways we can use to apply technology to the broadcast, you really need to understand the game, what the audience for that game likes and doesn’t like. That’s not always easy. There’s no CliffsNotes version of FGC [fighting-game community]. You have to experience it.”

The day concluded with Drew Ohlmeyer, head of content, Allied Esports International, who discussed Las Vegas’s Esports Arena as well as his understanding of the passion and sense of community in the esports industry.

“Our job as broadcasters, as streamers is simply to get out of the way,” he said. “Catch it, push it, and let them consume it. We try to do more listening than talking when we’re producing these events. We immediately enlist our friends at Esports Arena and those at the publishers and the orgs. They know what they’re doing; they have their finger on the real stuff: the heartbeat, the passion. It’s no different than being an [NFL] fan. Once you understand that and how real it is, everything else kind of takes care of itself.”

The Esports Production Forum also featured an array of panel discussions: At the Front Bench: Inside Live Esports Productions; Remote Production: Safe at Home; Creating the Esports Arena Experience: A New Technology Frontier; Esports Technical Challenges: Asset Management, Postproduction, and Storage; and College and Amateur Perspectives: The Growing Role of Esports at Conferences, Universities, and Local Communities. The event kicked off with the presentation State of the Market: Understanding the Esports Revolution by Nielsen Esports Managing Director Nicole Pike.

A series of case studies was presented: Esports in the Future: New Business Models and Technology Innovation (sponsored by Akamai); Esports Stadium Arlington Case Study: The Making of North America’s Largest, State-of-the-Art Esports Arena (sponsored by Canon); and Building an Esports and Gamer News Network (sponsored by Avid).

SVG’s Esports Production Forum was made possible through the support of this year’s event sponsors: Title Sponsor Ross Video; Diamond Sponsors Grass Valley and The Switch; Gold Sponsors AJA Video Systems, Aspera, Calrec/DiGiCo, Camplex, Canon, Evertz, Marshall Electronics, NewTek, Riedel Communications, Shoflo, Swiftstack, and The Studio – B&H; and Event Sponsors Akamai, Avid, Dolby, OpenDrives, SOS Global Express, and TNDV.

Check staging.sportsvideo.org over the coming days for more in-depth reports, video interviews, full-panel audio recordings, photos, and more from the inaugural Esports Production Forum.

Password must contain the following:

A lowercase letter

A capital (uppercase) letter

A number

Minimum 8 characters

;
SVGLogoHR_NOTAG-200

The Latest in Sports Video Production & Technology
in Your Inbox for FREE

Daily Email Newsletters Monday - Friday