• The Making of “Who Do You Say I Am?” the Award-Winning Church Film that Is Leading Atheists and Muslims to Jesus
    Jul 26 2025

    What started as a short Easter service documentary about a converted Muslim in America, turned into a sermon-length film that is bringing hundreds of atheists and Muslims to Jesus. It was produced by Peoria, Illinois’ Northwoods Community Church, and the film titled “Who Do You Say I Am?” won the Capture Summit Church Filmcraft Festival recently held in Houston, Texas.

    The documentary recounts the life journey of Sameed Osman, a once-devout Muslim focused on converting America to Islam. The film walks through his fight to disprove Jesus, but through a series of dreams and dangerous encounters, he is forced to answer the question: Who is Jesus?

    Northwoods’ Lead Storyteller and Digital Content Pastor Jake Sutton, is the filmmaker, and he sits down with Joseph Cottle for this episode of the Church Production Podcast. Sutton says after hearing about Osman’s story, he knew it was special and deserved time and attention.

    “I just felt like we've never really been given the time to take people to visual places where these people were, versus ‘Hey, we're going to have this talking head video,’ which I'm so just over that,” he explains.

    And it took time. It was finally ready almost six months after the originally planned Easter debut. Sutton’s teaching pastor knew it was well worth the wait and needed to be viewed by the whole church in its entirety. So he made the film that weekend’s message.

    “He's like, ‘Dude, that story is so powerful.’ And then so we watched it for 26 minutes and then he led like 120 some people to Christ. We keep hearing atheists coming to Christ this next week. This guy, who was a Christian converted to Isla,m is now meeting with Samid because he's like, ‘I didn't know there were this many lies, Sam, let's talk about it.’ So, we just keep hearing stories of people coming to Christ through it.”

    In this podcast, Sutton shares his backstory of how he got started making movies as a child and bounced around in other ministry jobs until his filmmaking talent was unleashed. He also talks about emotional life detours that could have changed his trajectory if it weren’t for the guiding love and grace from his church family.

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    44 Min.
  • Lighting Became His Ministry When God Moved Him from the Mission Field to the Stage: Scott LeBeau’s Story
    Jun 26 2025

    In this episode of the Church Production Podcast, host Joseph Cottle sits down with Scott LeBeau—longtime lighting director, creative leader, and, unexpectedly, professional bowler. Scott shares his remarkable journey from serving on the facilities and lighting teams at Life Mission Church and New Life Church in Colorado Springs to pursuing a lifelong dream of competing on the PBA Tour.

    Scott dives deep into the spiritual side of lighting design, describing how prayer and sensitivity to the Holy Spirit have shaped his creative decisions just as much as gear choices and stage design theory. He also offers hands-on advice for churches working with limited budgets—sharing practical lighting strategies, like using LED tape creatively or layering fixtures for depth.

    The conversation explores the often-overlooked relationship between lighting and video quality, the tension between honoring leadership and following divine direction, and how artistic disciplines in the church can—and should—adapt with the seasons.

    If you’re a church tech, worship leader, or creative looking for inspiration, technical tips, and a fresh perspective on what it means to serve with both excellence and obedience, this episode is a must-listen. It’s equal parts practical and personal, and Scott’s humility and humor shine through.

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    39 Min.
  • Building Bridges: The Relationship Between Church Techs and Worship Leaders, Building Relational Equity
    May 28 2025

    In this engaging Church Production Podcast, Life Mission Church’s Worship Pastor Zach Dinsmore and AVL Director Joseph Cottle share how they balance friendship and leadership. Discover their Christ-centered principles for building relational equity, navigating shared vision, and fostering unity between worship and tech teams, even through challenges like differing visions and unexpected transitions.

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    40 Min.
  • Crisis, Communication & Church Production - Phil Cooke on Leadership & Media
    Mar 31 2025

    Phil Cooke is a PhD, author, speaker, and longtime production director in Hollywood, broadcast television and the local church. He's passionate about church production leaders figuring out the message they're trying to tell. And in this Church Production Podcast episode, he talks with Joseph Cottle about all of that, alongside some great advice for young and veteran production leaders alike.

    Cooke has just returned from Athens, Greece where he was speaking to around 500 pastors and business leaders from 52 countries. He was invited to talk about his book, Church on Trial, and how to protect your congregation, mission and reputation during a crisis.


    “I had people coming up to me for hours just saying, ‘Wow, my pastor opened up for the first time about this crisis situation in our church,’” Cooke says. “And it's not just sexual stuff, it's embezzlement, it's financial, it could be legal issues. The city encroaching and some of the countries these pastors came from, the government is trying to pressure the church into shutting down their message. And so it's a lot of issues. It's very complex. So, I was thrilled. It was a great opportunity.”


    Cooke says you never know when you're going to find yourself in between a team and a bad situation and how you communicate to your team in that time is super important because you might be the one person they trust, the person that keeps them in their church community.


    “27% of the people that leave the church leave because of a crisis at their church or how poorly the church handled it. Now, that's not 27% of people going to another church. That's 27% of people that are walking away from God completely. So, it's how we handle ourselves during a crisis is absolutely important for a leader, whether you're a media leader, a communications director at your church, whatever you do, it's really important that you know how to step up and communicate clearly during something like that.”


    To hear more about Phil Cooke’s book, Church on Trial, and learn all about his production background and how he broke into film and television - both Christian and secular, listen to this podcast!

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    37 Min.
  • How AV Over IP is Changing Church Media: A Conversation with Cottonwood Creek Church's Will Chapman
    Feb 25 2025


    20 years ago, Will Chapman says the Lord asked him to start the media ministry at Cottonwood Creek Church in Allen, Texas. He did so with an intern and five committed volunteers. Over two decades, he grew that ministry exponentially and has moved on to the title of online minister there – but this new role is more like an executive producer or station manager, getting the church’s content out to different broadcasting outlets. Cottonwood Creek was the 2025 site of Church Production’s Capture Conference, the video production, streaming, and digital communications summit for churches. Chapman is a speaker at many such events and says the hot-button topic now is AV over IP.


    “Something that people need to realize, and I talk about this in the conferences and the workshops and things that I do regarding AV over IP technologies, and I recently talked about this at the SALT conference and some people looked at me differently when I said this, is that I believe every church technical leader needs to know about it, but it's not for every single location or every single church,” Chapman explains. “And the reason that I say that is that there are some specific things about the intersection of an AVL and the IP or internet protocol or things over ethernet or fiber that you have to understand if you're going to get into it. And so, one is to just let people know that there's still always going to be copper around and you're going to be able to have that some way somehow. But if you are looking at things and problems and needing some solutions that an IP-type protocol can help, it's important to really know the basics of network structure and how to be able to set up that network before you even put any kind of AVL on it.”


    So where do you start? Something that surprised Chapman when talking to friends who are integrators and dealers working on large installs like the Indianapolis Motor Speedway, they suggest that anyone new to AV over IP start with Dante and get level one certified right away - since so much gear is being made now at all price points is Dante enabled.


    They've got right now I think three different levels of certification that you can go through and it is meant to be something that builds one on top of the other and it's an easily accessible certification,” Chapman explains. “It teaches you some basics of IP protocol with AVL stuff about the importance of having a proper network set up. And then it begins to get further in on how to set up complex networks, VLANs and sub LANs and different things like that. But really everybody can go and get that level one.”


    While the integrators he knows are now requiring all their new hires to have the Dante level one certification, ironically, Chapman has yet to get his own certificate because he hasn’t needed it…yet.


    “No, we don't use video with Dante here at Cottonwood Creek. We use Dante audio and then we use the lighting control over IP,” he says. “And then we are using ST2110 natively here and ST2110 is basically the uncompressed video standard that the SMPTE organization said this is going to be the IP protocol for video where bandwidth and network management is not going to be something we're concerned with. We're going to be more concerned with quality and how good does the video look. How does it sound when all the audio and video are combined into that? And so that's where we are in ST2110 for video and we have switchers and things that all use ST2110 and we still do some native SDI stuff that we're capturing and putting into our video server, and that's just because we couldn't afford going ST2110 all in the first round.”


    Chapman says the great thing about having a switcher or router that will do ST2110 is it’s like going back to old school in professional video, where you had huge rack-mounted devices and cards to fit in with eight channels of coaxial video to get it into a digital video switcher and then it comes back out analog coaxial on an output card.

    “And so now instead of those cards being analog or SDI and converting it to a different protocol and be able to come out, now it's coming in ST2110 natively and then it allows you to be able to have the networking features of the IP protocol and be able to manage video that way without it being in this very simple SDI box video over IP and especially ST2110 has literally put a stick of dynamite on my nice little perfect little SDI box and blown it to bits.”


    Chapman says while he’s having to re-learn some forgotten skills, he says it’s exciting because churches and ministries of all different sizes can now have so many price-point options to choose from and that’s something the church market hasn’t had before.


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    43 Min.
  • What Churches Should Know About Moving from a Portable Campus to a Permanent Facility
    Jan 31 2025

    Is your church thinking about or already moving from a portable location to permanent facility?

    Recently, Radiant Church in Kansas City, Kansas switched from a mobile setup. They were a church plant that was meeting in a rented space every week until the recent move. David Jeong, the AVL Lead at Radiant Church grew up a preacher’s kid in South Korea and says he had no plan to work in ministry, “I said, ‘Dad, I'll do anything in my life except for being a pastor or being in full-time ministry, stuff like that.’ And the Lord said, ‘Jokes on you!’”

    Jeong’s family moved to the United States in 2015 and he went to a small Christian school where he joined the worship tech team to try and make friends and because the technology looked fun. There he developed a passion to learn about AVL and from that point he got involved at his church.

    Now he’s the AVL Lead at Radiant and just last year they went through the process of developing out a new and permanent facility. “It's in the greater Kansas City area. It's a pretty busy street. It was a sports recreation center beforehand,” and he says it still is. “They're actually right behind our main auditorium. So sometimes I see volleyball in our main auditorium underneath chairs and what not.”


    After they bought the building and did minimal renovations, Jeong says they decided to use their portable AV systems to worship in the new building while they renovated. It was a smart move because they didn’t have to pay rent at the old location while they renovated the new facility. Jeong’s first piece of advice? “I would actually suggest utilizing professionals,” he explains. “Whether it be system design and especially, especially, especially if you're rigging anything above people's heads. Do not ever do it by yourself. It's dangerous. It could fall. It's a liability.”


    Listen to this podcast to hear Joseph Cottle talk with Jeong at length about the entire process and the pros and cons of how they did it.

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    29 Min.
  • Set and Forget Audio Mixing Transforms LifeMission Church’s Live Streams
    Nov 29 2024
    Four steps to achieving a consistently high-quality live stream mix without the need for an additional sound engineer or mixing console.The livestream audio at LifeMission Church in Olathe, Kansas is getting so good that people are taking notice. Caden Van Dorn is a production tech at Life Mission. He’s an audio specialist who is being asked to help other churches around Kansas City figure out their live stream audio issues for a small fee. In this podcast Life Mission AVL Director Joseph Cottle and Van Dorn sit down to explain what they’re doing for the live stream that makes their audio so enviable. Cottle and Van Dorn are good friends and have been working together for about two years now. They explain that their live stream audio wasn’t always so good and it’s been a process bringing the quality to where it is now. And while they switched audio desks last summer, Van Dorn says that’s not the reason. “No, I don't think the console has made that big of a difference because I'm not really doing much on-board processing. All of the processing on the live stream is being done outboard through Waves,” he explains. Cottle says, “What I really love about our mix for the live stream is it sounds very live. Sometimes mixes can sound so dry and that's what makes them pretty meh and is a dead giveaway that it's a set and forget mix is just not good. So how are you using the little bit of processing after what Russell's doing? How are you using that to create that live feel?” Russell is the church’s contract sound engineer and Van Dorn says that live feel has several aspects to it. “Okay, so what this actually comes down to that live feel, the difference between a studio album, let's just take this to an album away from livestream or to a post produced album,” he explains. “You can tell when something is live because not everything is perfect. Well, depending on what you listen to, not everything is perfectly tight all the time and there's that natural organic feel to everything. But also you can hear the room and that translates very well to giving the feel of this is live when you're listening to something on Spotify.”As far as mics go, they have relatively inexpensive mics like Behringer condenser mics on mic stands on either side of the stage front and one next to the drum cage as well as shotgun mics hung near the PA but pointed at the crowd. Funny story. Cottle says those mics just appeared out of nowhere. “We were up moving light fixtures earlier this year and we look up, we're on this big extended boom. And then we're like, holy crap, somebody put shotgun mics up here. We had no idea. These have just been here the whole time for years...they’ve just been chilling.” Van Dorn says they were an important piece of the puzzle. “And those, since they're so close to the PA, they contribute. They bring a very mids-forward sound. And so those mics contribute a lot of weight to the feel of the live stream, he explains. “Those [the other] mics contribute a very bright sound and so when you marry that bright sound that can really deliver a lot of that live feel with the weight that you get from the mids-forward, shotgun mics that are next to the PA - It really helps glue the entire thing together.”Van Dorn goes on to explain what he calls the Four Pillars of a Successful Stream Mix: 1.) Proper Gain Staging“You need some way to make sure one that you can keep your audio from distorting, but also important, make sure that your limiters, what's being limited on your limiter translates to what's happening on your live stream mix.” 2.) Having an Accurate Room “Having a room that reflects what the livestream mix is going to be hearing. So, every church that has a soundboard has speakers that are of varying levels of quality. And so, they will either more accurately or less accurately represent the sound that is coming through that system.” 3.) Hire a Good Engineer (if you have to) “For smaller churches, you might think, ‘Hey, well I can't really swing a contract engineer.’ That's a very valid concern,” Cottle says. “I would come back at that though and say that if you have somebody who's attending your church that is a competent audio engineer and maybe they're volunteering once a month. You'd be surprised at how many people would show up every week if you offer them a hundred, 250 bucks a week to show up.”Van Dorn says the goal is consistency. “If you train your audio engineers up to offer something consistent that feels the same every time, that makes it worlds easier to set and forget a live stream mix because you know what to expect. If you have the same level and consistency of product being offered, it's so much easier to make these global decisions about your livestream mix and what's coming into it and feel confident that it will be well represented because your engineer knows how to do the same thing every week.”4.) ...
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    47 Min.
  • Making An Award Winning Film About Mental Health
    Oct 26 2024

    In this episode of the Church Production Podcast, host Joseph Cottle sits down with Austin Allen, the lead filmmaker at Times Square Church in New York City, to discuss Unseen, a short film that recently won Best Overall at the Capture Summit Church Film Craft Festival. More than just a film about faith, Unseen delves into the often-taboo topic of mental health within Christian communities. While the conversation does cover behind-the-scenes filmmaking details and technical aspects of the project, it also addresses the powerful theme of mental health struggles—a theme central to Unseen.

    Allen and the film's director, Caleb Clark, brought their own personal experiences to the story, creating characters who reflect the pain and resilience involved in mental health battles. From the pastor grappling with guilt and loss to the character Eli, who struggles with thoughts of despair, each narrative explores complex human emotions often left unspoken in church settings. The city of New York, featured prominently in the film, adds an authentic texture to the storytelling, making Unseen a relatable and impactful piece for audiences worldwide.

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    39 Min.