I don't know if this is automotive or not, but this is about as good a place as any to discuss this.
We were watching TV and my kid sees a Mazda commercial where I think a CX-30 is being featured driving across the eastern span of the Oakland-San Francisco Bay Bridge. But my 10 year old sees it and asks where are all the other cars? There absolutely no other vehicles seen, although they have a shot earlier that looks like a static shot of the western span with lots of tail lights visible, and a ship crossing under the bridge.
www.ispot.tv
I tried to explain that some film crews can arrange to have even a busy road or bridge closed for a few minutes, although I suppose these days they could have done it with computer graphics to remove everything else. Anyone deal with anything like this?
I was in area around Moab, Utah when we were heading back to Moab and the road was closed. There was a Grand County Sheriff's deputy there and when we asked what was going on, he politely said it was a "commercial being filmed". I saw the remnants of people on the side with a cooler, and thought maybe it was a beer commercial or something similar. Now I'm thinking that closing a remote road in Utah is way different than shutting off a major bridge.
We were watching TV and my kid sees a Mazda commercial where I think a CX-30 is being featured driving across the eastern span of the Oakland-San Francisco Bay Bridge. But my 10 year old sees it and asks where are all the other cars? There absolutely no other vehicles seen, although they have a shot earlier that looks like a static shot of the western span with lots of tail lights visible, and a ship crossing under the bridge.

2021 Mazda CX-30 TV Spot, 'More Power for Your Pursuit' [T1]
Time comes to a surreal crawl on a city skyline as a Mazda SUV zooms across a bridge and through its borders. A boat paused on the waves and birds suspended in flight illustrate a "magic realm" of liminal space between destinations, a place the automaker poetically calls both a no-man's land and...
I tried to explain that some film crews can arrange to have even a busy road or bridge closed for a few minutes, although I suppose these days they could have done it with computer graphics to remove everything else. Anyone deal with anything like this?
I was in area around Moab, Utah when we were heading back to Moab and the road was closed. There was a Grand County Sheriff's deputy there and when we asked what was going on, he politely said it was a "commercial being filmed". I saw the remnants of people on the side with a cooler, and thought maybe it was a beer commercial or something similar. Now I'm thinking that closing a remote road in Utah is way different than shutting off a major bridge.
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