 Hey, what is up? My name is Rubidium. Today, we are looking at this light, the Falconize RX-36TDX. It is a sort of light cloth LED panel. I'll leave it at 1% for now, 2% at 5600, so you can kind of like illuminate me here. Basically, I saw these guys at NAB and was really interested in it. Just strips of LED sewn into sort of like a velcro-vaft piece of cloth. So the light can get very small obviously, because you can just roll it up. You can have this cool thing where it comes with these sort of like stretch your arms, like stretching a canvas that you fold up and put into the back of it. And creates a rigid body that you then can add a lightbox to. You can add diffusion, you can add n-create to to control spill. It comes with a ballast slash dimmer that lets you control the intensity and also lets you go from 3000K to daylight. Dimmer also has a V-mount battery mount on the back and then the power pack which comes with a brace that then fits into the dimmer if you want to combine them. I feel like this light is best used not with all the accessories to make it like a giant 4x4 Kino. It would probably be like a 5x8 Kino or something if it was stretched out. But I've been using this light in a way that I really haven't been able to use any of the lights, which is, you know, gaffer taping it to the ceiling, taping it to walls. It comes with these very cool kind of grommeted LED tabs so you can attach them by a velcro to the side of the light and then hang it over a door or hang it in a window. It really is just like having a piece of cloth diffusion that then has this epic output. You can see by the size of the dimmer on the power pack that it's pretty bright. It's a 240W power supply and it also comes with a little remote control. So, say you do manage to stash this up into the ceiling somewhere, you don't have to manually have control of the dimmer. You can do everything, change the color and the brightness from where you are in front of camera or, you know, down at the floor. Basically, this is a super bright, super large light source, but it still, you know, weighs next to nothing, right? You could have this battery pack on your belt or in a backpack and walk around at night with this thing if you wanted to give Phil to a subject like stay behind camera and act as a moving Phil. The fact that all of this goes into this small little flat case is amazing too. It's not actually carbon fiber, it just has a carbon fiber pattern to it, but since there's nothing really in the light itself that can break, it's all very flexible LED. It's not going to, it's going to be fine to fly with. This light is kind of indicative of what's happening in the film industry right now, which is all these new players are coming in. Everyone's either reducing the cost of lighting and cameras and lenses, or they're finding a whole new form factor for that to work. And, you know, this kind of thing, even two years ago, you would have had to get a light gear, light mat for, and they cost back then $3,500. You can get this thing on Amazon right now for like less than 800 bucks. Considering the amount of the size of the light and the brightness of it, it's like, you know, unbelievable. That's my review of the Thalcanize RX 36 TDX. Check out the links in the description and I'll see you next time.