Andrew,

Do you have videos online?  I would disagree about comparison between web 
videos and the professional videos on television.  The main point I think is 
the poor quality of the content of the documentaries as shown on television.  
The images are beautiful and fit together perfectly, but for most of them they 
have been polished until the life is sucked out of them.  Most of them are 
visual equivalents of musak - elevator music for your eyes.  The content has 
been dumbed down till it tells you nothing.  There is more content in a second 
grade text book than most videos.  There also is the question of integrity of 
the documentary programs shown on television.  In certain famous historical 
documentaries, photos of different battles and event were mixed together in 
order to improve the story flow- accuracy be damned.  The stories of the cute 
baby foxes out on a day of exploration are typically mixtures of shots taken 
over the course of several weeks and edited to some editor's cutesy story line. 
 I will not get into a further rant on the current poor state of documentary on 
television and film, but only say that well edited and polished video does not 
a great documentary make.

I am not arguing that web videos are great.  Most of them are not.  There is a 
saying that 90% of everything is crap.  (The percentage may be higher for web 
videos.) Nor am I suggesting that the lack of or poor editing in the videos 
make them quaint or endearing.  Many could use some editing for content.  What 
makes them interesting is the immediacy of their content.  They are interesting 
to watch in spite of their limitations.  

I was posting video clips in Real Media format since the mid 90's YouTube.was 
created in 2005 and marked the true beginning of the web video explosion.  It 
is a much more democratic medium in which everyone can participate. It is 
egalitarian rather than elitist.  Forums like YouTube are changing our 
perceptions of how documentaties should be created.  Many of the accepted 
conventions in movie making and video making were not originally designed out 
of a sense of artistic integrity,  but as a reflection of the limitations of 
the equipment used in the filming.  People posting on the web are ignoring 
these conventions for better or worse.  These experiments are seeping into the 
broader world of television and movies.  There was a TV movie set in the last 
major earthquake in California showing some of the heroics of average people.  
What jumped out in this movie was that there was nota sound track.  There have 
been sound tracks for movies since before there were sound in the movie.  This 
was a direct result of news cast video styles and home movie styles.  You look 
on the news, often incorporated into the broadcasts are raw footage shot by 
people using their home video cameras, cameras, or cell phones.  Correspondents 
are being interviewed overseas during wars via cell phones.  Home videos of 
tornados and disasters are a mainstay on the Weather Channel.  There are still 
limitations in this medium in streaming over the web and with the mechanics of 
capturing motion and sound with the equipment you have, but with the ability to 
shoot video clips available in an $8 digital camera the trend will continue to 
grow

It is this immediacy of the medium, the grittiness of the medium, the first 
person perspectives that make web videos interesting to watch.  Could they be 
better?  Sure, but they are interesting to watch in spite of their limitations. 
The web is the place to see the next phase of television documentaries evolve.  
As I said for better or worse.   

If we are to make an impact as individuals, or as a group in the future we need 
to be part of the medium as it evolves.  We need to make these web videos and 
experiment with the medium.  We need to embrace the phenomenon.  Some things 
work out, some do not, some techniques now considered to be unacceptable will 
become the new standard in the future.   So for everyone out there shooting and 
posting web video, keep shooting, and keep posting.

Ed


PS: Don't be disappointed that people don't comment, it's difficult to 
get anyone to take 8 minutes out of their day to sit and watch a video, 
no matter what the content. For my longer videos (9+ minutes) I expect 
only a small number of people to watch them all the way through, 
remember that today's viewers are used to professionally edited 
video/movies with tight segments of concentrated information. Maybe 
consider doing some editing to get the length down a little, if you can 
have more focused "segments" you might have greater success getting 
people to dig into your video, keep up the good work!
-AJ

--~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~
Eastern Native Tree Society http://www.nativetreesociety.org
Send email to [email protected]
Visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/entstrees?hl=en
To unsubscribe send email to [email protected]
-~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---

Reply via email to