This video was interesting because I filmed it (in Broomfield) and managed to edit it even though it was entirely in Mandarin. Sadly, it was lost in the Oracle acquisition.
Solaris iSNS介ç»å’Œä½¿ç”¨ – Wei Bin Victor Li – in Chinese.
On our way to St. Barth’s, Ross and I stayed overnight with my classmate Sarah and her husband Dave, who met playing music. They treated us to a mini bluegrass concert in their Chelsea home, which Ross captured on my digital still camera.
You can see Sarah and Dave at the Bluegrass and Beyond Jam, held on the 1st, 3rd and the occasional 5th Monday of each month at Paddy Reilly’s Pub (519 2nd Ave, New York, NY 10016 — SW corner of 2nd Ave and 29th street) in Manhattan.
I don’t claim to be a professional videographer (for one thing, I’m entirely self-taught). I do videoblogging, which is fundamentally different.
From my (very limited) experience, it seems that professional corporate video is, usually:
thoroughly planned (and likely scripted) in advance;
involves quite a lot of large, heavy equipment, with multiple people to set it up and run it.
the people who do this know how to do media, but don’t necessarily know much about what or who they’re filming (nor do they need to).
filming often takes place in a studio, which may need to be reserved well in advance, or in some other carefully-planned, controlled location;
professional post-production (editing, compressing, and posting video) can take a long time
all of this is expensive
Videoblogging, on the other hand:
eh… not so planned. When I go to an event, I have an idea which talks I want to film, but things usually get added or subtracted at the last minute. Alongside the formal talks, I also try to grab interviews and other material.
equipment is minimal and light, reasonable for one person to move around and manage.
a videoblogger is part of the community, and therefore can see and take advantage of filming opportunities as they arise – or create them.