Videos are more like photography. It's not as much about trying to tell a story as it is creating images.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
I think from an early age I was aware of how a camera can tell a story, how a movie camera can affect how the narrative is told.
I love telling stories with images. But I think there's more to just saying a movie is great visually.
People are fascinated, for whatever reason, by human drama, and the idea that cameras are capturing ambient stories.
I don't actually see that much difference between telling stories in journalism and telling them on film. The tools are very different, but the basic idea is the same.
If you want to tell stories, be a writer, not a filmmaker.
Whether it's an ad or organic content, video provides a new creative dimension for storytelling on 'Instagram'. Video lets people convey the power and beauty in a moment through sight, sound, and motion.
For me, being in front of a camera is a matter of practicing and refining your art. I think, if you're telling a story worth telling, it's worth investing the time into developing.
I think the more web video there is, the more press you'll get, as well as all the people who want to tell stories that haven't been told before but can't do that on TV because different stories are a risk.
Video is a funny thing. It's one thing to be an artist, singer-songwriter, and use words and create pictures in people's minds. And then be asked to do video for it, to actually give a certain visual for your song.
You know, when people talk about filmmaking and the techniques of filmmaking, we use them all the time in network television news in order to make our stories simpler, tighter and more understandable to the general public.
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