I am afraid I have shared this with a fee listers already 1 on 1 but EVERY Hollywood movie or TV show that features a scene with an Eagle always plays the screech of the Red Tailed Hawk. I laugh every time.
I always chuckle when a Kookaburra shows up in all the wrong places.Kirk BettsOn Jul 20, 2012, at 8:19 AM, Norman Famous wrote:Hi,I used to complain every time they used what I thought was a mourning warbler, always out of habitat.I talked with Greg Bundy, director of the sound library at Cornell University's Laboratory of Ornithology, about this recording and he corrected me saying it was a MacGillivray Warbler (and chuckled) the library had supplied. To me, it sounds like a mourning warbler. Google MacGillivray warbler vocalization and the Cornell site has one clip. Their song is very similar as is their alarm note.TV commercials also used a savannah sparrow song in many out-of-habitat situations.Norm Famous from AugustaOn Fri, Jul 20, 2012 at 7:07 AM, Glenn Jenks <gjenks@midcoast.com> wrote:
About 10 years ago Wayne Peterson and I noticed that several commercials, including a car ad and a deck stain ad, were using the song of the Mourning Warbler as a kind of aural punctuation mark. It was the same sound clip each time. It prompted us to inquire if he was receiving residuals. Anybody else notice?
Glenn
From: maine-birds@googlegroups.com [mailto:maine-birds@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Mike Fahay
Sent: Thursday, July 19, 2012 12:26 PM
To: Marie
Cc: Chuck Homler; Norman Famous; Maine Birds; Robin Robinson
Subject: [Maine-birds] Re: Birds on TV golf
The Masters has always been good for Carolina Wren, Cardinal, sometimes a BTGreen or two.
And on the mis-use subject, watch the Lonesome Dove series. There's an incessant Whip-poor-will calling at high noon throughout the series.. In the middle of the prairie. Guess they could only afford one playback.
On Thu, Jul 19, 2012 at 8:07 AM, Marie <mijord@maine.rr.com> wrote:
YES, they do add bird sounds to golf broadcast sound tracks - at times they overdo it so it becomes irritating instead of pleasant!
Back some years ago CBS got a call from a birder to let them know that they were contributing to miss information about bird distribution because the songs they inserted were of birds that would not likely be found in the area where that golf tournament was being held!! The only ones I have recognized since then have been appropriate to the area - CBS did listen! J Marie
From: maine-birds@googlegroups.com [mailto:maine-birds@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Chuck Homler
Sent: Thursday, July 19, 2012 7:47 AM
To: Norman Famous
Cc: Mike Fahay; Maine Birds; Robin Robinson
Subject: Re: [Maine-birds] Tour de France & TV Birdlists
While watching a NatGeo special about Cheetahs it became obvious they add nature sounds in post production as a bird in the background was definitely an eastern wood-Pewee. Incidentally I read somewhere they add a nature soundtrack to golf broadcasts.
Chuck
Sent from my iPhone... So please forgive typographical errors, message brevity and any strange word choices my phone decides were better than what I actually typed.
On Jul 19, 2012, at 7:41 AM, Norman Famous <nfamous@maine.edu> wrote:Great, TV birds! For those keeping TV bird lists:
I was flipping the controls one morning and stopped briefly (note the word briefly) on the BBC's Teletubbies being broadcast on Public TV. All of a sudden, a scene in a small well-landscaped park/garden in the UK emerged from a Teletummy (I don't recall the particular Teletubbie; I think it was Tinky Winky). While in the garden, I could hear two European robins (song and call notes), a great tit and blackbird (European version) very clearly. I thought I also hear a blue tit. It was like being there. What a pleasant surprise as it was winter and the woods in Augusta were quiet. Usually when Teletubbies show come on I turn the channel before switching to a scene in the UK. In any event, it is a good source of species for TV bird listers and couch potatoes.
Norm Famous
On Wed, Jul 18, 2012 at 10:07 PM, Mike Fahay <mfahay@gmail.com> wrote:
If you keep a TV birdlist, but are not watching the Tour, you missed an amazing side view of a soaring Griffon Vulture photo'd from the camera helicopter today in the Pyrenees. Went on for almost a minute. Very cool!
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