• Is Rendering Is the New Sketch? The Rise of Visualization in Architecture Today

    Got a project that’s too bold to build? Submit your conceptual works, images and ideas for global recognition and print publication in the 2025 Vision Awards! The Main Entry deadline of June 6th is fast approach — submit your work today.
    Architectural visualization has gone from a technical exercise to a creative discipline in its own right. Once treated as abehind-the-scenes tool for client approval, rendering is now front and center, circulating online, shaping public perception, and winning awards of its own.
    There are many reasons for this shift. More powerful software, changing client expectations, and a deeper understanding of what visualizations can actually do have all contributed to it. As a result, photorealism has definitely reached staggering levels of clarity, but that’s just one part of the story. In this new era of rendering, visualizations also have a role in exploring what a building or a space could represent, evoke or question.
    This conceit is precisely why the Architizer’s Vision Awards were created. With categories for every style and approach, the program highlights the artists, studios and images pushing architectural rendering forward. With that in mind, take a closer look at what defines this new era and explore the Vision Awards categories we’ve selected to help you find where your work belongs.

    Rendering Is Now Part of the Design Process
    New Smyril Line headquarters, Tórshavn, Faroe Islands by ELEMENT, Studio Winner, 2023 Architizer Vision Awards, Photorealistic Visualization
    For years, renderings were treated as the final step in the process. Once the design was complete, someone would generate a few polished visuals to help sell the concept. They weren’t exactly part of the design conversation, but rather, a way to illustrate it after the fact.
    That’s no longer the case, however. The best rendering artists are involved early, helping shape how a project is perceived and even how it develops. This results in visualizations that don’t just represent architecture, but influence it, affecting crucial decisions in the process. Through framing, atmosphere and visual tone, renderings can set the emotional register of an entire design, meaning that rendering artists have a much bigger role to play than before.
    Image by Lunas Visualization, Special Mention, 2023 Architizer Vision Awards, Architectural Visualizer Of The Year
    Recognizing this shift in studio culture and design thinking, the Vision Awards treats rendering as its own form of architectural authorship, capable of shaping how buildings are imagined, remembered and understood. To reflect that sentiment, the program includes categories that celebrate mood, meaning and precision alike:

    Photorealistic Rendering – For visuals that bring spatial clarity and technical realism to life.
    Artistic Rendering – For painterly, stylized or interpretive representations.
    Architecture & Atmosphere – For renderings that evoke emotion through light, weather or tone.

    Technology Expanded the Medium
    Image by iddqd Studio, Special Mention, 2023 Architizer Vision Awards, Architectural Visualizer Of The Year
    Rendering used to be a time-consuming process with limited flexibility. Now, however, entire scenes can be generated, re-lit, re-textured and even redesigned in mere minutes. Want to see a project at dawn, dusk and golden hour? You can. Want to swap out a concrete façade for charred timber without starting from scratch? That’s part of the workflow.
    But these new capabilities are not limited to speed or polish. They open the door to new kinds of creativity where rendering becomes a tool for exploration, not just presentation. What if a building had no fixed scale? What if its context was imagined, not real?
    Silk & Stone by Mohammad Qasim Iqbal, Student Winner, 2023 Architizer Vision Awards, AI Assisted Visualization
    And then, of course, there’s AI. Whether used to generate inspiration or build fully composed environments, AI-assisted rendering is pushing authorship into uncharted territory. The results are sometimes surreal, sometimes speculative, but they speak to a medium that’s still expanding its identity.
    The Vision Awards recognizes these new roles of visualizations, offering categories for rendering artists that focus on experimenting with tools, tone or technique, including:

    AI-assisted Rendering – For images that push the boundaries of representation using generative tools.
    Artistic Rendering – For stylized visuals that embrace abstraction, mood, or imagination.

    Context Became a Key Part of the Picture
    Image by BINYAN Studios, Special Mention, 2023 Architizer Vision Awards, Architectural Visualizer Of The Year
    Architecture doesn’t exist in isolation and, increasingly, neither do the renderings that represent it. By showing how a design sits within its surroundingsvisualization becomes a way of understanding context, not just composition.
    In this new era of visualization, renderings show where people gather, how light travels across a building, or what it feels like to approach it through trees, traffic or rain. Movement, interaction and use-cases are highlighted, allowing viewers to grasp the idea that architecture is more than a single object, but rather, a part of a bigger picture.
    Image by Lunas Visualization, Special Mention, 2023 Architizer Vision Awards, Architectural Visualizer Of The Year
    That shift comes from a growing awareness that design is experienced, not just observed. A rendering can communicate density or calm, movement or pause, the rhythm of a city or the quiet of a field. It can reveal how a project sits in its environment or how it reshapes it.
    The Vision Awards includes several categories that speak directly to this expanded role of rendering, including:

    Architecture & Urban Life — For renderings that depict street-level energy, crowds, or civic scale.
    Architecture & Environment — For visuals grounded in landscape, terrain, or ecosystem.

    Exterior Rendering — For exteriors that communicate architectural form through environment, setting and scale.

    Architecture & People — For moments that highlight human presence, interaction, or use.

    Details Tell the Story
    Natura Veritas by David Scott Martin, Special Mention, 2023 Architizer Vision Awards, Photorealistic Visualization
    New tools have made it easier to render with nuance by highlighting texture, light and atmosphere in ways that feel specific rather than generic. With real-time engines, expanded material libraries and refined lighting controls, rendering artists are spending more time on the parts of a project that might once have gone unnoticed.
    Image by ELEMENT, Studio Winner, 2023 Architizer Vision Awards, Architectural Visualizer Of The Year
    This shift reflects changing priorities in architectural storytelling. Material choices, interior qualities and subtle transitions are becoming central to how a space is communicated. Whether it’s the grain of unfinished timber or the glow of morning light across a tiled floor, these moments give architecture its tone.
    The Vision Awards includes categories that reward this level of focus, recognizing renderings that carry weight through surface, rhythm and mood:

    Exterior Rendering — For close-up visuals that highlight the materials, textures, and design details of a building’s outer skin.
    Interior Rendering — For immersive representations of interior space.
    Architecture & Materiality — For images that showcase texture, depth and construction logic.

    Rendering Is Architecture’s Visual Language — and the Vision Awards are Here to Celebrate It
    Cloud Peak Hotel above the Rainforest Mist by FTG Studio / Zhiwei Liu, Xianfang Liu, Special Mention, 2023 Architizer Vision Awards, AI Assisted Visualization
    Architectural rendering is no longer a supporting act. It’s a growing creative field with its own voice, influence and momentum. As visualization continues to shape how projects are developed, discussed and shared, it’s clear that the people creating these images deserve recognition for their role in the architectural process.
    The Vision Awards were built to recognize exactly this. By highlighting both the artistic, technical and conceptual strength of architectural imagery, the program gives visualization the space it’s earned — alongside architecture itself.
    If you’re an Arch Viz artist, you can explore multiple categories that reflect the challenges, innovations and opportunities of this new era of rendering—from photorealism to abstraction, mood to material. And if your work reflects a strong point of view across multiple images, the Rendering Artist of the Year accolade was created with you in mind.
    Winners are featured across Architizer’s global platforms, published in print, included in the Visionary 100 and celebrated by a jury of industry leaders. Winning means visibility, credibility and long-term recognition at a global scale.
    So if your work helps shape how architecture is seen and understood, this is your platform to share it.
    Enter the Vision Awards
    Got a project that’s too bold to build? Submit your conceptual works, images and ideas for global recognition and print publication in the 2025 Vision Awards! The Main Entry deadline of June 6th is fast approach — submit your work today.
    The post Is Rendering Is the New Sketch? The Rise of Visualization in Architecture Today appeared first on Journal.
    #rendering #new #sketch #rise #visualization
    Is Rendering Is the New Sketch? The Rise of Visualization in Architecture Today
    Got a project that’s too bold to build? Submit your conceptual works, images and ideas for global recognition and print publication in the 2025 Vision Awards! The Main Entry deadline of June 6th is fast approach — submit your work today. Architectural visualization has gone from a technical exercise to a creative discipline in its own right. Once treated as abehind-the-scenes tool for client approval, rendering is now front and center, circulating online, shaping public perception, and winning awards of its own. There are many reasons for this shift. More powerful software, changing client expectations, and a deeper understanding of what visualizations can actually do have all contributed to it. As a result, photorealism has definitely reached staggering levels of clarity, but that’s just one part of the story. In this new era of rendering, visualizations also have a role in exploring what a building or a space could represent, evoke or question. This conceit is precisely why the Architizer’s Vision Awards were created. With categories for every style and approach, the program highlights the artists, studios and images pushing architectural rendering forward. With that in mind, take a closer look at what defines this new era and explore the Vision Awards categories we’ve selected to help you find where your work belongs. Rendering Is Now Part of the Design Process New Smyril Line headquarters, Tórshavn, Faroe Islands by ELEMENT, Studio Winner, 2023 Architizer Vision Awards, Photorealistic Visualization For years, renderings were treated as the final step in the process. Once the design was complete, someone would generate a few polished visuals to help sell the concept. They weren’t exactly part of the design conversation, but rather, a way to illustrate it after the fact. That’s no longer the case, however. The best rendering artists are involved early, helping shape how a project is perceived and even how it develops. This results in visualizations that don’t just represent architecture, but influence it, affecting crucial decisions in the process. Through framing, atmosphere and visual tone, renderings can set the emotional register of an entire design, meaning that rendering artists have a much bigger role to play than before. Image by Lunas Visualization, Special Mention, 2023 Architizer Vision Awards, Architectural Visualizer Of The Year Recognizing this shift in studio culture and design thinking, the Vision Awards treats rendering as its own form of architectural authorship, capable of shaping how buildings are imagined, remembered and understood. To reflect that sentiment, the program includes categories that celebrate mood, meaning and precision alike: Photorealistic Rendering – For visuals that bring spatial clarity and technical realism to life. Artistic Rendering – For painterly, stylized or interpretive representations. Architecture & Atmosphere – For renderings that evoke emotion through light, weather or tone. Technology Expanded the Medium Image by iddqd Studio, Special Mention, 2023 Architizer Vision Awards, Architectural Visualizer Of The Year Rendering used to be a time-consuming process with limited flexibility. Now, however, entire scenes can be generated, re-lit, re-textured and even redesigned in mere minutes. Want to see a project at dawn, dusk and golden hour? You can. Want to swap out a concrete façade for charred timber without starting from scratch? That’s part of the workflow. But these new capabilities are not limited to speed or polish. They open the door to new kinds of creativity where rendering becomes a tool for exploration, not just presentation. What if a building had no fixed scale? What if its context was imagined, not real? Silk & Stone by Mohammad Qasim Iqbal, Student Winner, 2023 Architizer Vision Awards, AI Assisted Visualization And then, of course, there’s AI. Whether used to generate inspiration or build fully composed environments, AI-assisted rendering is pushing authorship into uncharted territory. The results are sometimes surreal, sometimes speculative, but they speak to a medium that’s still expanding its identity. The Vision Awards recognizes these new roles of visualizations, offering categories for rendering artists that focus on experimenting with tools, tone or technique, including: AI-assisted Rendering – For images that push the boundaries of representation using generative tools. Artistic Rendering – For stylized visuals that embrace abstraction, mood, or imagination. Context Became a Key Part of the Picture Image by BINYAN Studios, Special Mention, 2023 Architizer Vision Awards, Architectural Visualizer Of The Year Architecture doesn’t exist in isolation and, increasingly, neither do the renderings that represent it. By showing how a design sits within its surroundingsvisualization becomes a way of understanding context, not just composition. In this new era of visualization, renderings show where people gather, how light travels across a building, or what it feels like to approach it through trees, traffic or rain. Movement, interaction and use-cases are highlighted, allowing viewers to grasp the idea that architecture is more than a single object, but rather, a part of a bigger picture. Image by Lunas Visualization, Special Mention, 2023 Architizer Vision Awards, Architectural Visualizer Of The Year That shift comes from a growing awareness that design is experienced, not just observed. A rendering can communicate density or calm, movement or pause, the rhythm of a city or the quiet of a field. It can reveal how a project sits in its environment or how it reshapes it. The Vision Awards includes several categories that speak directly to this expanded role of rendering, including: Architecture & Urban Life — For renderings that depict street-level energy, crowds, or civic scale. Architecture & Environment — For visuals grounded in landscape, terrain, or ecosystem. Exterior Rendering — For exteriors that communicate architectural form through environment, setting and scale. Architecture & People — For moments that highlight human presence, interaction, or use. Details Tell the Story Natura Veritas by David Scott Martin, Special Mention, 2023 Architizer Vision Awards, Photorealistic Visualization New tools have made it easier to render with nuance by highlighting texture, light and atmosphere in ways that feel specific rather than generic. With real-time engines, expanded material libraries and refined lighting controls, rendering artists are spending more time on the parts of a project that might once have gone unnoticed. Image by ELEMENT, Studio Winner, 2023 Architizer Vision Awards, Architectural Visualizer Of The Year This shift reflects changing priorities in architectural storytelling. Material choices, interior qualities and subtle transitions are becoming central to how a space is communicated. Whether it’s the grain of unfinished timber or the glow of morning light across a tiled floor, these moments give architecture its tone. The Vision Awards includes categories that reward this level of focus, recognizing renderings that carry weight through surface, rhythm and mood: Exterior Rendering — For close-up visuals that highlight the materials, textures, and design details of a building’s outer skin. Interior Rendering — For immersive representations of interior space. Architecture & Materiality — For images that showcase texture, depth and construction logic. Rendering Is Architecture’s Visual Language — and the Vision Awards are Here to Celebrate It Cloud Peak Hotel above the Rainforest Mist by FTG Studio / Zhiwei Liu, Xianfang Liu, Special Mention, 2023 Architizer Vision Awards, AI Assisted Visualization Architectural rendering is no longer a supporting act. It’s a growing creative field with its own voice, influence and momentum. As visualization continues to shape how projects are developed, discussed and shared, it’s clear that the people creating these images deserve recognition for their role in the architectural process. The Vision Awards were built to recognize exactly this. By highlighting both the artistic, technical and conceptual strength of architectural imagery, the program gives visualization the space it’s earned — alongside architecture itself. If you’re an Arch Viz artist, you can explore multiple categories that reflect the challenges, innovations and opportunities of this new era of rendering—from photorealism to abstraction, mood to material. And if your work reflects a strong point of view across multiple images, the Rendering Artist of the Year accolade was created with you in mind. Winners are featured across Architizer’s global platforms, published in print, included in the Visionary 100 and celebrated by a jury of industry leaders. Winning means visibility, credibility and long-term recognition at a global scale. So if your work helps shape how architecture is seen and understood, this is your platform to share it. Enter the Vision Awards Got a project that’s too bold to build? Submit your conceptual works, images and ideas for global recognition and print publication in the 2025 Vision Awards! The Main Entry deadline of June 6th is fast approach — submit your work today. The post Is Rendering Is the New Sketch? The Rise of Visualization in Architecture Today appeared first on Journal. #rendering #new #sketch #rise #visualization
    ARCHITIZER.COM
    Is Rendering Is the New Sketch? The Rise of Visualization in Architecture Today
    Got a project that’s too bold to build? Submit your conceptual works, images and ideas for global recognition and print publication in the 2025 Vision Awards! The Main Entry deadline of June 6th is fast approach — submit your work today. Architectural visualization has gone from a technical exercise to a creative discipline in its own right. Once treated as a (more or less) behind-the-scenes tool for client approval, rendering is now front and center, circulating online, shaping public perception, and winning awards of its own. There are many reasons for this shift. More powerful software, changing client expectations, and a deeper understanding of what visualizations can actually do have all contributed to it. As a result, photorealism has definitely reached staggering levels of clarity, but that’s just one part of the story. In this new era of rendering, visualizations also have a role in exploring what a building or a space could represent, evoke or question. This conceit is precisely why the Architizer’s Vision Awards were created. With categories for every style and approach, the program highlights the artists, studios and images pushing architectural rendering forward. With that in mind, take a closer look at what defines this new era and explore the Vision Awards categories we’ve selected to help you find where your work belongs. Rendering Is Now Part of the Design Process New Smyril Line headquarters, Tórshavn, Faroe Islands by ELEMENT, Studio Winner, 2023 Architizer Vision Awards, Photorealistic Visualization For years, renderings were treated as the final step in the process. Once the design was complete, someone would generate a few polished visuals to help sell the concept. They weren’t exactly part of the design conversation, but rather, a way to illustrate it after the fact. That’s no longer the case, however. The best rendering artists are involved early, helping shape how a project is perceived and even how it develops. This results in visualizations that don’t just represent architecture, but influence it, affecting crucial decisions in the process. Through framing, atmosphere and visual tone, renderings can set the emotional register of an entire design, meaning that rendering artists have a much bigger role to play than before. Image by Lunas Visualization, Special Mention, 2023 Architizer Vision Awards, Architectural Visualizer Of The Year Recognizing this shift in studio culture and design thinking, the Vision Awards treats rendering as its own form of architectural authorship, capable of shaping how buildings are imagined, remembered and understood. To reflect that sentiment, the program includes categories that celebrate mood, meaning and precision alike: Photorealistic Rendering – For visuals that bring spatial clarity and technical realism to life. Artistic Rendering – For painterly, stylized or interpretive representations. Architecture & Atmosphere – For renderings that evoke emotion through light, weather or tone. Technology Expanded the Medium Image by iddqd Studio, Special Mention, 2023 Architizer Vision Awards, Architectural Visualizer Of The Year Rendering used to be a time-consuming process with limited flexibility. Now, however, entire scenes can be generated, re-lit, re-textured and even redesigned in mere minutes. Want to see a project at dawn, dusk and golden hour? You can. Want to swap out a concrete façade for charred timber without starting from scratch? That’s part of the workflow. But these new capabilities are not limited to speed or polish. They open the door to new kinds of creativity where rendering becomes a tool for exploration, not just presentation. What if a building had no fixed scale? What if its context was imagined, not real? Silk & Stone by Mohammad Qasim Iqbal, Student Winner, 2023 Architizer Vision Awards, AI Assisted Visualization And then, of course, there’s AI. Whether used to generate inspiration or build fully composed environments, AI-assisted rendering is pushing authorship into uncharted territory. The results are sometimes surreal, sometimes speculative, but they speak to a medium that’s still expanding its identity. The Vision Awards recognizes these new roles of visualizations, offering categories for rendering artists that focus on experimenting with tools, tone or technique, including: AI-assisted Rendering – For images that push the boundaries of representation using generative tools. Artistic Rendering – For stylized visuals that embrace abstraction, mood, or imagination. Context Became a Key Part of the Picture Image by BINYAN Studios, Special Mention, 2023 Architizer Vision Awards, Architectural Visualizer Of The Year Architecture doesn’t exist in isolation and, increasingly, neither do the renderings that represent it. By showing how a design sits within its surroundings (whether it’s a busy street, a lakeside, or a forest) visualization becomes a way of understanding context, not just composition. In this new era of visualization, renderings show where people gather, how light travels across a building, or what it feels like to approach it through trees, traffic or rain. Movement, interaction and use-cases are highlighted, allowing viewers to grasp the idea that architecture is more than a single object, but rather, a part of a bigger picture. Image by Lunas Visualization, Special Mention, 2023 Architizer Vision Awards, Architectural Visualizer Of The Year That shift comes from a growing awareness that design is experienced, not just observed. A rendering can communicate density or calm, movement or pause, the rhythm of a city or the quiet of a field. It can reveal how a project sits in its environment or how it reshapes it. The Vision Awards includes several categories that speak directly to this expanded role of rendering, including: Architecture & Urban Life — For renderings that depict street-level energy, crowds, or civic scale. Architecture & Environment — For visuals grounded in landscape, terrain, or ecosystem. Exterior Rendering — For exteriors that communicate architectural form through environment, setting and scale. Architecture & People — For moments that highlight human presence, interaction, or use. Details Tell the Story Natura Veritas by David Scott Martin, Special Mention, 2023 Architizer Vision Awards, Photorealistic Visualization New tools have made it easier to render with nuance by highlighting texture, light and atmosphere in ways that feel specific rather than generic. With real-time engines, expanded material libraries and refined lighting controls, rendering artists are spending more time on the parts of a project that might once have gone unnoticed. Image by ELEMENT, Studio Winner, 2023 Architizer Vision Awards, Architectural Visualizer Of The Year This shift reflects changing priorities in architectural storytelling. Material choices, interior qualities and subtle transitions are becoming central to how a space is communicated. Whether it’s the grain of unfinished timber or the glow of morning light across a tiled floor, these moments give architecture its tone. The Vision Awards includes categories that reward this level of focus, recognizing renderings that carry weight through surface, rhythm and mood: Exterior Rendering — For close-up visuals that highlight the materials, textures, and design details of a building’s outer skin. Interior Rendering — For immersive representations of interior space. Architecture & Materiality — For images that showcase texture, depth and construction logic. Rendering Is Architecture’s Visual Language — and the Vision Awards are Here to Celebrate It Cloud Peak Hotel above the Rainforest Mist by FTG Studio / Zhiwei Liu, Xianfang Liu, Special Mention, 2023 Architizer Vision Awards, AI Assisted Visualization Architectural rendering is no longer a supporting act. It’s a growing creative field with its own voice, influence and momentum. As visualization continues to shape how projects are developed, discussed and shared, it’s clear that the people creating these images deserve recognition for their role in the architectural process. The Vision Awards were built to recognize exactly this. By highlighting both the artistic, technical and conceptual strength of architectural imagery, the program gives visualization the space it’s earned — alongside architecture itself. If you’re an Arch Viz artist, you can explore multiple categories that reflect the challenges, innovations and opportunities of this new era of rendering—from photorealism to abstraction, mood to material. And if your work reflects a strong point of view across multiple images, the Rendering Artist of the Year accolade was created with you in mind. Winners are featured across Architizer’s global platforms, published in print, included in the Visionary 100 and celebrated by a jury of industry leaders. Winning means visibility, credibility and long-term recognition at a global scale. So if your work helps shape how architecture is seen and understood, this is your platform to share it (and, hopefully, your time to shine!). Enter the Vision Awards Got a project that’s too bold to build? Submit your conceptual works, images and ideas for global recognition and print publication in the 2025 Vision Awards! The Main Entry deadline of June 6th is fast approach — submit your work today. The post Is Rendering Is the New Sketch? The Rise of Visualization in Architecture Today appeared first on Journal.
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  • Let’s pregame Tony Gilroy and Diego Luna’s May 13 Andor livestream Q&A






    Disney announced on Monday evening that it will be holding a livestream Q&A for season 2 of its Star Wars drama Andor on Tuesday, May 14, at 12 p.m.
    ET.
    The stream will be hosted on YouTube, and will center on series creator, writer, and showrunner Tony Gilroy and star Diego Luna, though other guests from the show will also be present.
    Here’s the embedded livestream and the description of the event:


    In anticipation of the three-episode series finale of Andor, join Diego Luna and Creator & Executive Producer Tony Gilroy as they take us behind-the-scenes of the show’s final season.
    Diego and Tony will be joined by special guests Adria Arjona, Denise Gough, Elizabeth Dulau, Genevieve O’Reilly and Kyle Soller for live questions and reflections across their Star Wars journeys.
    With special appearances by some of your favorite creators including @HeroesReforged, @CatherineLaSalle, and @MaceAhWindu.






    Two things about this livestream feel unusual: First, it’s dropping right before the season and series finale of Andor, which goes live on Disney Plus at 9 p.m.
    ET on May 14, so fans won’t be able to ask questions that take the end of the season into account.
    (Likely a measure to avoid spoilers for people who haven’t watched yet.) And second, Disney says the participants will be taking live questions from viewers.


    As anyone who’s ever attended a live Q&A with significantly famous folk probably already knows, these kinds of forums rarely produce really great questions.
    That’s more often true in a live setting, where questioners often just want to hold the attention of those famous people, and tend to ramble or not ask questions at all.
    “This is more a comment than a question…” and “As a content creator myself, here are my thoughts on your work…” are clichés that still crop up at nearly every audience Q&A I attend at film festivals.
    And I will never forget attending a live-on-stage George Lucas interview that made time for questions at the end.
    A young man with a Chewbacca-bandolier messenger bag and no compunctions about wasting everyone else’s time got up to brag to Lucas about how many Moleskine notebooks full of story ideas he had back home, and ended with, “So my question is, Mr.
    Lucas, what can I do for you?” Lucas was… not gentle in his response.

    Collectively, we can do better.
    The key to a good Q&A is preparation — thinking in advance about questions that matter to you, then checking to see if maybe the participants have already answered that exact question elsewhere.
    (E.g.
    “Hey, Tony Gilroy, were you thinking of Nazi Germany when you wrote this show, or something more recent?”) And it’s important to be as specific as possible with questions — “What was the hardest part of the show to do?” isn’t a bad one, but it’s broad enough that it could be applied to any aspect of the writing, casting, shooting, editing, or post-production work, and might not get a particularly specific answer.

    So let’s pregame this interview.
    What, at this point, do you want to know from Tony Gilroy and Diego Luna (or any other promised participant in this project) that you think they haven’t already answered? What would you most like to hear them talk about? Personally, I’d like to know whether Gilroy ever considered any other end to Syril Karn’s arc.
    Not saying there’s anything wrong with what we saw on screen — Gilroy has called it a “Greek and dramatic” ending — but I really thought he was being set up for something else specific.

    What do you most want to ask the Andor creator and cast? (If nothing else, maybe the rest of us can help find a place where your question has already been answered, since there’s going to be a lot of competition to get questions through during the livestream.)
    Source: https://www.polygon.com/star-wars/598764/andor-tony-gilroy-diego-luna-season-2-livestream-where-to-watch
    #lets #pregame #tony #gilroy #diego #lunas #andor #livestream #qampampa
    Let’s pregame Tony Gilroy and Diego Luna’s May 13 Andor livestream Q&A
    Disney announced on Monday evening that it will be holding a livestream Q&A for season 2 of its Star Wars drama Andor on Tuesday, May 14, at 12 p.m. ET. The stream will be hosted on YouTube, and will center on series creator, writer, and showrunner Tony Gilroy and star Diego Luna, though other guests from the show will also be present. Here’s the embedded livestream and the description of the event: In anticipation of the three-episode series finale of Andor, join Diego Luna and Creator & Executive Producer Tony Gilroy as they take us behind-the-scenes of the show’s final season. Diego and Tony will be joined by special guests Adria Arjona, Denise Gough, Elizabeth Dulau, Genevieve O’Reilly and Kyle Soller for live questions and reflections across their Star Wars journeys. With special appearances by some of your favorite creators including @HeroesReforged, @CatherineLaSalle, and @MaceAhWindu. Two things about this livestream feel unusual: First, it’s dropping right before the season and series finale of Andor, which goes live on Disney Plus at 9 p.m. ET on May 14, so fans won’t be able to ask questions that take the end of the season into account. (Likely a measure to avoid spoilers for people who haven’t watched yet.) And second, Disney says the participants will be taking live questions from viewers. As anyone who’s ever attended a live Q&A with significantly famous folk probably already knows, these kinds of forums rarely produce really great questions. That’s more often true in a live setting, where questioners often just want to hold the attention of those famous people, and tend to ramble or not ask questions at all. “This is more a comment than a question…” and “As a content creator myself, here are my thoughts on your work…” are clichés that still crop up at nearly every audience Q&A I attend at film festivals. And I will never forget attending a live-on-stage George Lucas interview that made time for questions at the end. A young man with a Chewbacca-bandolier messenger bag and no compunctions about wasting everyone else’s time got up to brag to Lucas about how many Moleskine notebooks full of story ideas he had back home, and ended with, “So my question is, Mr. Lucas, what can I do for you?” Lucas was… not gentle in his response. Collectively, we can do better. The key to a good Q&A is preparation — thinking in advance about questions that matter to you, then checking to see if maybe the participants have already answered that exact question elsewhere. (E.g. “Hey, Tony Gilroy, were you thinking of Nazi Germany when you wrote this show, or something more recent?”) And it’s important to be as specific as possible with questions — “What was the hardest part of the show to do?” isn’t a bad one, but it’s broad enough that it could be applied to any aspect of the writing, casting, shooting, editing, or post-production work, and might not get a particularly specific answer. So let’s pregame this interview. What, at this point, do you want to know from Tony Gilroy and Diego Luna (or any other promised participant in this project) that you think they haven’t already answered? What would you most like to hear them talk about? Personally, I’d like to know whether Gilroy ever considered any other end to Syril Karn’s arc. Not saying there’s anything wrong with what we saw on screen — Gilroy has called it a “Greek and dramatic” ending — but I really thought he was being set up for something else specific. What do you most want to ask the Andor creator and cast? (If nothing else, maybe the rest of us can help find a place where your question has already been answered, since there’s going to be a lot of competition to get questions through during the livestream.) Source: https://www.polygon.com/star-wars/598764/andor-tony-gilroy-diego-luna-season-2-livestream-where-to-watch #lets #pregame #tony #gilroy #diego #lunas #andor #livestream #qampampa
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    Let’s pregame Tony Gilroy and Diego Luna’s May 13 Andor livestream Q&A
    Disney announced on Monday evening that it will be holding a livestream Q&A for season 2 of its Star Wars drama Andor on Tuesday, May 14, at 12 p.m. ET. The stream will be hosted on YouTube, and will center on series creator, writer, and showrunner Tony Gilroy and star Diego Luna, though other guests from the show will also be present. Here’s the embedded livestream and the description of the event: In anticipation of the three-episode series finale of Andor, join Diego Luna and Creator & Executive Producer Tony Gilroy as they take us behind-the-scenes of the show’s final season. Diego and Tony will be joined by special guests Adria Arjona, Denise Gough, Elizabeth Dulau, Genevieve O’Reilly and Kyle Soller for live questions and reflections across their Star Wars journeys. With special appearances by some of your favorite creators including @HeroesReforged, @CatherineLaSalle, and @MaceAhWindu. Two things about this livestream feel unusual: First, it’s dropping right before the season and series finale of Andor, which goes live on Disney Plus at 9 p.m. ET on May 14, so fans won’t be able to ask questions that take the end of the season into account. (Likely a measure to avoid spoilers for people who haven’t watched yet.) And second, Disney says the participants will be taking live questions from viewers. As anyone who’s ever attended a live Q&A with significantly famous folk probably already knows, these kinds of forums rarely produce really great questions. That’s more often true in a live setting, where questioners often just want to hold the attention of those famous people, and tend to ramble or not ask questions at all. “This is more a comment than a question…” and “As a content creator myself, here are my thoughts on your work…” are clichés that still crop up at nearly every audience Q&A I attend at film festivals. And I will never forget attending a live-on-stage George Lucas interview that made time for questions at the end. A young man with a Chewbacca-bandolier messenger bag and no compunctions about wasting everyone else’s time got up to brag to Lucas about how many Moleskine notebooks full of story ideas he had back home, and ended with, “So my question is, Mr. Lucas, what can I do for you?” Lucas was… not gentle in his response. Collectively, we can do better. The key to a good Q&A is preparation — thinking in advance about questions that matter to you, then checking to see if maybe the participants have already answered that exact question elsewhere. (E.g. “Hey, Tony Gilroy, were you thinking of Nazi Germany when you wrote this show, or something more recent?”) And it’s important to be as specific as possible with questions — “What was the hardest part of the show to do?” isn’t a bad one, but it’s broad enough that it could be applied to any aspect of the writing, casting, shooting, editing, or post-production work, and might not get a particularly specific answer. So let’s pregame this interview. What, at this point, do you want to know from Tony Gilroy and Diego Luna (or any other promised participant in this project) that you think they haven’t already answered? What would you most like to hear them talk about? Personally, I’d like to know whether Gilroy ever considered any other end to Syril Karn’s arc. Not saying there’s anything wrong with what we saw on screen — Gilroy has called it a “Greek and dramatic” ending — but I really thought he was being set up for something else specific. What do you most want to ask the Andor creator and cast? (If nothing else, maybe the rest of us can help find a place where your question has already been answered, since there’s going to be a lot of competition to get questions through during the livestream.)
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