BELOW THE LINE PODCAST

Skid - DGA Assistant Director

A podcast about the film industry: stories from the set, told by the crew

  1. 1H AGO

    S26 - Ep 8 - 98th Oscars - Directing

    Best Director may not be the top prize — but it’s the category that sparks the loudest arguments. In Episode 8 of Below the Line’s 2026 Oscar series, Skid is joined by Katie Carroll, Bill Hardy, and Shaun O’Banionto break down the nominees for the Academy Award for Best Director at the 98th Academy Awards. With years of shared on-set experience and a long-running panel dynamic, the conversation is sharp, occasionally irreverent, and grounded in what it actually takes to steer a production at this level. As with the rest of this year’s Oscar series, the conversation is available both as an audio podcast and as a full video episode on YouTube. Our discussion ranges across: Chloé Zhao’s restraint in Hamnet, and how stillness and intimacy compete against larger canvases in this category The spirited (and sometimes hilarious) divide over Marty Supreme — its length, its chaos, and the argument over what discipline looks like on screen Paul Thomas Anderson’s command of tone in One Battle After Another, and the logistical confidence required to orchestrate narrative sprawl Joachim Trier’s delicate handling of memory and performance in Sentimental Value, and the quiet authority behind that control Ryan Coogler’s genre-blending ambition in Sinners, and the risks that come with expanding the boundaries of a franchise The case for Frankenstein as a nomination that could have reshaped the race — and why its absence sparked genuine debate at the table The episode carries the easy banter of collaborators who’ve spent years dissecting this category together — complete with side bets, mock outrage, and the occasional good-natured jab — but underneath the laughs is a serious respect for the director’s role: holding the vision, protecting performance, and keeping a sprawling production aligned from prep through post. 🎧 Press play — or watch the full conversation on YouTube — and join us Below the Line for Episode 8 of our 2026 Oscar series. For more, visit belowtheline.biz.

    58 min
  2. 4D AGO

    S26 - Ep 7 - 98th Oscars - Sound

    Sound is where performance, environment, and emotion converge — shaped first on set and refined in the mix. In Episode 7 of Below the Line’s 2026 Oscar series, Skid is joined by Steve Morrow (Production Sound Mixer) and Don Sylvester (Sound Editor) to examine the nominees for Achievement in Sound at the 98th Academy Awards. Together, they explore how production and post-production intersect to support performance, pacing, and dramatic tension. As with the rest of this year’s Oscar series, the conversation is available both as an audio podcast and as a full video episode on YouTube. Our discussion explores: The immersive racing soundscape of F1, and how layered engine recording, ambisonics, and dynamic mixing place audiences inside the cockpit The evolving vocal treatment and tonal balancing in Frankenstein, where horror, romance, and creature design must coexist within a unified sonic world How One Battle After Another uses vehicles, space, and environmental texture to reinforce character perspective Capturing live musical performance and choreographed chaos in Sinners, where production sound and post must move in lockstep The blurred boundary between music and environment in Sirāt, and how subtle soundscapes shape perception as much as spectacle Why production sound and sound editing are inseparable disciplines when it comes to protecting performance A brief look at shortlist contender Warfare, and what makes immersive combat sound both technically complex and emotionally overwhelming Throughout the conversation, Steve and Don reflect on the practical realities of their craft — from mic placement and set noise to mix decisions and audience psychology — offering a detailed look at how sound both grounds and elevates cinematic storytelling. 🎧 Press play — or watch the full conversation on YouTube — and join us Below the Line for Episode 7 of our 2026 Oscar series. For more, visit belowtheline.biz.

    44 min
  3. FEB 15

    S26 - Ep 6 - 98th Oscars - Production Design

    Judging production design means considering not just what we see, but how an entire world was constructed to function on screen. This week on Below the Line, Skid is joined by Bob Shaw (Production Designer), Regina Graves (Set Decorator), and Kerry Weeks (Leadman) to examine the nominees for Achievement in Production Design at the 98th Academy Awards. Representing three distinct roles within the art department, they offer a grounded, practical look at how these films constructed their environments — from large-scale builds to the smallest graphic detail. As with the rest of this year’s Oscar series, the conversation is available both as an audio podcast and as a full video episode on YouTube. Our discussion ranges across: The operatic scale and extensive builds of Frankenstein, from castle interiors to laboratory design — and whether grandeur ultimately serves or overwhelms the story The period authenticity of Hamnet, including the recreation of Shakespeare’s Globe and the delicate balance between research and creative interpretation The layered Lower East Side streets of Marty Supreme, where signage, storefront graphics, and textural detail quietly anchor a frenetic narrative The cohesive, character-driven environments of One Battle After Another, where homes, dojos, and lived-in interiors feel organic rather than theatrical The tonal shift in Sinners, and the ongoing challenge of aging sets just enough — especially when audience expectations of “period” don’t always align with historical reality How decisions about wear, grit, and cleanliness can subtly shape credibility without drawing attention to themselves Why contemporary or less “showy” films like Black Bag are often overlooked despite meticulous design work Additional standouts from the year, including Train Dreams and Song Sung Blue, which demonstrate how tonal precision and environmental detail can carry as much weight as larger-scale builds Across the conversation, the three perspectives reveal how production design succeeds not only through bold visual statements, but through coordination — between design, dressing, graphics, lighting, and performance — so that nothing feels isolated from the world of the film. 🎧 Press play — or watch the full conversation on YouTube — and join us Below the Line for another chapter in our 2026 Oscar series. For more, visit belowtheline.biz.

    40 min
  4. FEB 11

    S26 - Ep 5 - 98th Oscars - Animated Feature

    Animated feature filmmaking is defined by endurance — years of development, constant iteration, and creative risks that often aren’t visible on screen. This week on Below the Line, Skid is joined by Kent Seki and Camille Leganza to discuss the nominees for Best Animated Feature at the 98th Academy Awards. Drawing on their extensive experience in animation, they look closely at how different creative pipelines, production cultures, and storytelling ambitions shape this year’s unusually diverse slate of nominees. As with the rest of this year’s Oscar series, the conversation is available both as an audio podcast and as a full video episode on YouTube, offering listeners the option to watch the discussion or engage with it in its traditional audio form. Our discussion ranges across: The long development paths behind animated features — and what creative “endurance” really looks like in practice Why Arco stands out for its visual authorship, unconventional time-travel structure, and optimistic view of the future The creative challenges behind Elio, including director transitions, tonal recalibration, and ambitious visual experimentation How K‑Pop Demon Hunters became an unexpected cultural phenomenon through bold genre blending and stylistic risk The visual restraint, emotional specificity, and rapid production schedule that define Little Amélie or the Character of Rain The scale, scope, and world-building demands of Zootopia 2, and why sequels can be harder than originals How audience expectations, box-office performance, and cultural context intersect with Academy recognition What this year’s nominees suggest about the evolving identity of animated feature filmmaking The conversation presents animated features as works of sustained creative commitment — films shaped as much by patience, resilience, and collaboration as by technology or visual style. 🎧 Press play — or watch the full conversation on YouTube — and join us Below the Line as the 2026 Oscar series continues. For more, visit belowtheline.biz.

    55 min
  5. FEB 7

    S26 - Ep 4 - 98th Oscars - Makeup and Hairstyling

    Makeup and hairstyling are among the most visible crafts in filmmaking — shaping how an audience understands age, history, and identity before a word is spoken. This week on Below the Line, Skid is joined by Yvonne De Patis-Kupka, Angela Nogaro, and Lynda Armstrong for an in-depth discussion of the nominees for Achievement in Makeup and Hairstyling at the 98th Academy Awards. Drawing on a wide range of experience across film and television, they examine how hair and makeup choices shape character, period, genre, and emotional tone — and how those choices are evaluated within a single, highly competitive Oscar category. As with the rest of this year’s Oscar series, the conversation is available both as an audio podcast and as a full video episode on YouTube, giving listeners the option to watch the discussion or continue enjoying the show in its traditional audio format. Our discussion ranges across: The contrast between large-scale prosthetic work and more restrained, character-driven approaches to makeup and hair How transformation functions differently across genres, from the mythic world of Frankenstein to the grounded period realism of Sinners The challenges of evaluating culturally specific styles, including the kabuki-influenced work in Kokuho When subtlety becomes the hardest achievement — and why “natural” work can be the most demanding The relationship between budget, resources, and creative problem-solving, particularly in films like The Ugly Stepsister How continuity, aging, and wear are tracked over time to support long-form storytelling The ongoing difficulty of judging hair, makeup, and prosthetics together within a single Oscar category What this year’s nominees reveal about the Academy’s evolving expectations for the craft The conversation highlights makeup and hairstyling as disciplines defined by precision, restraint, and collaboration — crafts that help actors fully inhabit their roles while anchoring the world of the film. 🎧 Press play — or watch the full conversation on YouTube — and join us Below the Line as the 2026 Oscar series continues. For more, visit belowtheline.biz.

    51 min
  6. FEB 3

    S26 - Ep 3 - 98th Oscars - Property Mastering

    This episode begins with a hypothetical question: what would it look like if Property Mastering were its own Oscar category? We explore it as part of Below the Line’s 2026 Oscar series. This week on Below the Line, Skid is joined by Scott Buckwald and Gregg Bilson, Jr. for a deep dive into the craft of property mastering through the lens of the 98th Academy Awards. Using a fictional Oscar ballot as a framework, they explore how props function as storytelling tools — shaping character, tone, and authenticity across a wide range of films. As with the rest of this year’s Oscar series, the conversation is available both as an audio podcast and as a full video episode on YouTube, offering listeners and viewers a closer look at how below-the-line crafts are discussed and evaluated from inside the work itself. Our discussion ranges across: Why property mastering sits at the intersection of design, performance, and logistics — often unnoticed, but never incidental How props help define character and period across films like Nuremberg and Song Sung Blue The heightened demands of genre storytelling, from the mythic scale of Frankenstein to the grounded realism of Sinners Managing continuity and narrative logic when props evolve over the course of a story The technical and ethical considerations involved in handling story-critical objects, from weapons to documents and artifacts How preparation, research, and documentation allow property masters to support performance without drawing attention to the work itself Why collaboration with actors and other departments is essential to making props feel lived-in rather than ornamental What this hypothetical exercise reveals about how deeply props are woven into storytelling, even when they’re easy to overlook The conversation highlights property mastering as a discipline defined by preparation, judgment, and storytelling instincts — a craft that quietly anchors performance and world-building across every genre. 🎧 Press play — or watch the full conversation on YouTube — and join us Below the Line as the 2026 Oscar series continues. For more, visit belowtheline.biz.

    36 min
  7. JAN 30

    S26 - Ep 2 - 98th Oscars - Visual Effects

    Continuing Below the Line’s 2026 Oscar series, the conversation turns to Visual Effects — a category that sits at the intersection of technology, craft, and storytelling. This week on Below the Line, Skid is joined by Kent Seki and Chris Batty for a focused conversation about the Oscar nominees for Achievement in Visual Effects. Together, they look at how the category has evolved — and what separates technical accomplishment from storytelling impact. As with the rest of this year’s Oscar series, this episode is available both as an audio podcast and as a full video conversation on YouTube, offering listeners and viewers a closer look at how visual-effects work is discussed, debated, and evaluated from inside the process. Our discussion ranges across: The different creative demands of large-scale spectacle versus realism-driven effects How films like Avatar: Fire and Ash and Jurassic World Rebirth approach scale and world-building, compared to the grounded physical environments of F1 and The Lost Bus The challenge of integrating effects into performances, locations, and production design without overwhelming the story Why elements like fire, debris, and destruction require as much restraint as technical precision How visual effects intersect with cinematography, editorial, and sound to maintain continuity and tone The increasing expectation that effects choices support narrative clarity rather than novelty What this year’s nominees suggest about how the Academy continues to define excellence in the field Rather than focusing on predictions, the conversation looks at how visual effects decisions are made — and how those choices shape tone, performance, and story across very different kinds of films. 🎧 Press play — or watch the full conversation on YouTube — and join us Below the Line as the 2026 Oscar series continues. For more, visit belowtheline.biz.

    53 min
  8. JAN 26

    S26 - Ep 1 - 98th Oscars - Film Editing

    As the 98th Academy Awards approach, Below the Line returns for its seventh annual Oscar series — beginning with Film Editing, a category that quietly shapes every other craft recognized on Oscar night. This week on Below the Line, Skid is joined by Amy Duddleston and Christopher Angel to open the 2026 Oscar series with a focused conversation about the nominees for Achievement in Film Editing. Together, they examine how editing choices shape performance, tone, and point of view — and why the category can be difficult to evaluate without understanding what the work actually requires. This episode also marks a first for Below the Line: these Oscar conversations are now available both as an audio podcast and as full video episodes on YouTube, offering listeners the choice to watch the discussion unfold or continue enjoying the show in its traditional audio format. Our discussion ranges across: Why Film Editing is often misunderstood as “most editing” rather than best judgment The distinct editorial challenges behind this year’s nominees, including F1, Marty Supreme, One Battle After Another, Sentimental Value, and Sinners How performance-driven films ask editors to prioritize restraint over visibility The editor’s role in shaping character psychology and audience alignment When cutting calls attention to itself — and when disappearing is the hardest choice Navigating collaboration with directors whose approaches range from highly controlled to deliberately chaotic What this year’s nominees reveal about how the Academy continues to define the craft Grounded in the perspective of two working editors, the conversation focuses less on prediction and more on process — unpacking how editing decisions actually function on screen, and why the craft remains essential even when it goes unnoticed. 🎧 Press play — or watch the full conversation on YouTube — and join us Below the Line as we begin our 2026 Oscar series. For more, visit belowtheline.biz.

    44 min
5
out of 5
79 Ratings

About

A podcast about the film industry: stories from the set, told by the crew

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