Memorial & Funeral Livestream

A clean, dignified broadcast of the day
a loved one is remembered.

A funeral or memorial service is one of the few broadcasts that only happens once. Our team brings the same broadcast standard used for network television and live civic coverage to funeral homes, churches, schools, venues, and graveside services — so every family member and friend who needs to be there, near or far, can be.

Why a broadcast

A phone on a tripod isn’t the same as a professional livestream.

Most services don’t get a second take. The video the family keeps — and the broadcast the extended family watches — should be made by the same kind of team that handles municipal coverage and live PPV. Quietly. Professionally. Without missing the moment.

Family that can’t travel

Grandparents in a nursing home, cousins overseas, classmates deployed, a child in college — a broadcast brings them into the room.

A recording that holds up

The video becomes the record of the day. A broadcast-level capture means it doesn’t degrade, buffer, or get lost in a phone.

A team that knows the room

Funerals are not stadiums. Our crew is briefed, uniformed in blacks, and runs the broadcast without drawing attention from the service.

What we deploy

A broadcast kit chosen for a quiet room.

The same gear that travels for live city council coverage and sold-out fight nights, configured and dressed for a memorial service. No flashes. No streaming overlays that don’t belong on the day. Just clean picture, clean audio, and a quiet crew.

The service is broadcast in real time, archived as the permanent record, and — if the family wants — made available as a private replay link for anyone who needs to see it again.

  • 4K Multi-Camera

    Multi-angle coverage of the room, the family, and any speakers or performers — cut live so online viewers see the same service as the people in the seats.

  • Broadcast-quality audio

    Mixed cleanly from the venue’s audio system, or provided by us when one isn’t available. Speech and music translated for both the room and the stream.

  • Professional on-air lower thirds

    Names, roles, and program cues overlaid cleanly for online viewers — drawn with the restraint appropriate for the day.

  • In-program tribute video package

    A prepared video tribute can be inserted into the live program at the right moment, mixed seamlessly so the room and online audience share the same beat of the service.

  • Multi-platform distribution

    Simultaneous distribution to YouTube, Facebook, a private embed, and any livestream link the funeral home or family already uses.

  • Redundant, archived broadcast

    Multiple upstream paths and on-site recording so the same broadcast can be saved, re-cut, or replayed at any time after the live window.

Broadcast point of view during the joint memorial service
On the air during the joint memorial service — broadcast switcher, program feed, and the room beyond.
Wide view of more than 800 mourners at the Boys and Girls Club of Belle Glade, FL during the joint memorial service
The room at the broadcast mix position — audio console in the foreground, the full attendance and stage from the operator’s seat.
Featured case study

Joint memorial service, broadcast end-to-end.

In January 2025, two families who had each lost a young man in the same crash asked us to broadcast a single joint service for more than 800 mourners at the Boys and Girls Club of Belle Glade, FL — with a tribute video package inserted into the live program, and enough reach to include everyone who couldn’t travel.

In-room attendance
800+
Replay views
6,000+
Cameras
4
Audio rig
RCF PA
Who this is for

Anyone planning a service that needs to reach further than the room.

We work directly with families, with funeral directors and funeral homes, with churches and religious officiants, and with community leads organizing a public memorial or celebration of life.

Families

A service for a parent, partner, child, or friend — with as little overhead on the family as possible.

Funeral homes & directors

A quietly run broadcast that supplements the services you already provide — with full archiving you can hand to the family.

Religious officiants & churches

A broadcast that respects the structure of the service you lead — run by a crew that knows where to stand and where not to.

Community & civic memorials

A joint memorial, a public gathering, or a celebration of life — with the reach and reliability a community event demands.

How we work

A quiet, professional crew. From first call to archived replay.

Every memorial broadcast runs on a short timeline and a heavy day. We keep the planning clear, the on-site footprint small, and the broadcast on the air without drawing attention from the service.

01

Discovery call

A short conversation to learn who is being remembered, where the service is, who needs to be reached, and what audio, video, or tribute assets are already in hand.

02

Pre-production

Site survey, camera positions, audio path, tribute package prep, and a brief for the funeral team. Nothing is left to the day.

03

The day of service

Crew on site in blacks, broadcast on the air from the agreed start, multi-platform distribution, and an archived copy handed to the family when the service ends.

Planning a memorial broadcast?

We’ll handle the broadcast end of it — so the day stays focused on the person being remembered. Initial conversations are quiet, free, and kept private.