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Real-Life Math

You are a foley artist working on a film that is set at a carnival. This will be challenging work because the scene has so many different sounds, including people laughing, shouting, noises from the rides, music and much more.

You are going through the film frame by frame to examine and take notes on what happens in each scene and to calculate the length of each scene. "When you're editing, you have to resolve issues relating to time," says Gary Boggess, a foley artist in Ohio. "Speed is an important factor for a foley artist."

The film you are looking at was shot in video, which has a speed of 30 frames per second.

  1. If the film shows 5 seconds of a roller-coaster ride, how many frames will this be?
  2. You watch 95 frames of a person rolling cotton candy in a tub and handing it to the customer, and then another 85 frames of the customer eating the candy. How much time does this sequence take?

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