Axios
Mixing Board
Live
A full-day summit for the country's top communications leaders — captured, cut, and delivered as a 90-second narrative recap.
Where the best communicators came to reckon with noise.
Axios Mixing Board Live brought together brand leaders, comms executives, and media innovators from companies like Walmart, OpenAI, Poppy, Dear Media, and Blue Origin on October 20, 2025 for a full day of conversation about what it means to communicate with clarity and humanity in an era of AI-generated noise.
Hen's Bread Productions was brought in to capture the day and turn it into something worth watching — not a highlight reel, but a single argument told in 90 seconds: the profession is changing, the community is ready, and the ground floor of AI belongs to communicators.
The client booked our Camera Van package — a 3-man crew with 4 cameras, fully loaded and ready to roll. No gear shuttles, no setup delays, no watching the clock. We arrived complete and stayed complete for the entire day. This is what event videography in Austin looks like at the production company level.
The edit follows a four-act structure built around a single emotional peak — Poppy co-founder Allison Ellsworth — with every other voice serving to set up or pay off that moment.
We don't have customers, we have community.
Allison Ellsworth · Co-Founder, PoppyAI awareness has increased 24%. AI fluency has increased just 4% year over year.
Stephanie Tignore · Head of Engineering, GrammarlyThe public has a seat at the table. Who in the company is going to represent their perspective?
Dan Bartlett · EVP Corporate Affairs, WalmartWe are at the cusp of AI. Getting in on the ground floor — there's a lot of opportunity for communication professionals.
Eleanor Hawkins · Head of Communicators, AxiosFour cameras.
Three crew. One van.
We walked the room before we walked in the door.
Assembly Hall is a large, open venue. Before production day, we built a Gaussian splat scan of the space — a photorealistic 3D model that let us study the room's geometry, sightlines, and depth before a single camera was unboxed.
What we found changed our gear plan entirely. The room was bigger than it looked in reference photos, and the couch-style seating meant the audience would fill the entire floor — pushing any camera operator to the back wall to stay out of the frame.
A 70–200mm lens wasn't going to reach the stage from that distance. We made the call before arriving: 400mm glass on every camera position. On the day, it was the right decision. Speakers were locked, close, and clean — with a full room between us and the stage.
Pre-production isn't a formality. For events you can't reshoot, knowing the room in advance is the difference between footage that works and footage that doesn't.
Interactive 3D scan captured during pre-production. Drag to explore the space as we saw it before the event.
The people
behind the ideas.
Every conversation.
Complete and delivered fast.
The recap tells the story of the day. These are the full sessions — every panel, uncut, edited and delivered the same week. For clients who flew in from out of town, that matters more than they expect.
The footage doesn't do you any good on a plane.
Most clients coming into Austin for a corporate event want their footage fast. That's a reasonable ask — and one that gets complicated the moment the event ends and everyone boards a flight home.
Here's what actually happens: the raw drive gets handed off at the airport, lands at an editor's desk two days later, and a project that should have taken a week turns into three. Or the client's internal team tries to cut it themselves on the road and it shows.
For Axios on October 20, 2025, all seven full panel discussions were edited, color graded, and delivered via Vimeo the same week — alongside the 90-second recap. The client had everything they needed before they'd finished unpacking.
That's not luck. It's what happens when you hire the crew that filmed it to edit it. We know every angle, every take, every hot mic moment. We don't need a handoff meeting. We were there.
Edit first. Shoot everything.
A recap like this lives or dies in the edit room. Knowing the narrative structure before production day means we know exactly what we're hunting for — and nothing gets missed.
Bringing your corporate event
to Austin?
Hen's Bread Productions covers conferences, panels, and summits across Austin and Central Texas. Multi-camera, fast turnaround, full post-production. Jacob picks up — no voicemail, no runaround.