Corporate / Keynote Production
The room holds.
The story moves.
Audio, lighting, LED, video, and show control for keynotes, town halls, brand launches, and executive presentations in Los Angeles.
Designed, programmed, rehearsed, and run by one crew, against one cue stack, in one room.
What scales with you.
The same crew that runs a 50-person executive briefing in a soundstage runs a 5,000-person general session at the Microsoft Theater. The variables change. The discipline does not.
Every brief starts with the same questions — what is the speaker trying to land, who is in the room, what does the recap need to look like, and what is the hardest moment in the run-of-show. The rig is sized backward from those answers.
For a 50-person executive briefing, that might be three Source Fours, a discrete L-Acoustics 5XT system, a 75-inch reference monitor on a rolling stand, and a single op at a Mac mini running QLab. For a 5,000-person general session, it is a flown line array, a 30-meter LED ribbon, eight broadcast cameras, a switcher truck, and a comms backbone that touches every department in the building.
Same brief intake. Same rehearsal philosophy. Same person calling the show.
Questions before the brief.
How early do you need to be in the room?
For a single-day keynote with rear-projection LED, line-array PA, and full lighting rig, we plan a one-day load-in, a half-day program and previz, a tech rehearsal, a dress, and show. For multi-day general sessions or anything with flown elements, add a day. We build the schedule against your speaker rehearsals, not against ours.
Can you handle the speaker rehearsal as well as the show?
Yes. Speaker rehearsals are run by the same console operators who run the show, on the same cue stack, in the same room. Comfort monitors, confidence cues, presentation playback, and IFB are all live during rehearsal. The speaker who walks the rehearsal is the speaker who walks the show.
Do you work with our content agency or in-house creative team?
Both. We deliver a content spec sheet — pixel map, frame rate, color space, codec, safe areas — to whichever team is building the deck or sizzle. We also run a content QC pass on the wall during program day, so the agency sees their work on the actual hardware before the speaker does.
Is this for events at our office, or only at venues?
Both. We run keynotes at the Theatre at Ace, the Orpheum, the Microsoft Theater, the Wiltern, soundstages in Culver City, hotel ballrooms in Beverly Hills, and at company HQs in Playa Vista, Santa Monica, and Culver City. The rig scales to the room.
How do we start a conversation?
Email hello@anydaylive.com with a date window, venue or city, headcount estimate, and a one-paragraph brief. We come back inside one business day with a structured response, questions, a draft scope, and the names of the people who will actually be in the room.