Last week I finished a video eulogy for my mother who passed away after a lengthy illness. The occasion was somber and the nearly 48 straight hours of editing was taxing both mentally and emotionally. However, the final result was, even in my critical opinion, very impressive. After the memorial service, the A/V guy at the church approached me and said he was extremely impressed and inspired by my work. He went on to say that he was a video student and was always looking for inspiring work. Flattered (and a little embarrassed) I told him I only had two days to finish it. Looking stunned, he said, "that's why you're the professional and I'm the student." Despite the sadness of the circumstances I was beaming inside.
This is the first major project I've ever finished. I started with Vegas 4 after convincing my then soon-to-be wife that I needed an editor to create a video montage of us to be played at our wedding. Since then, I've upgraded to VV6 (primarily for the features in DVDA3) and I am hooked. So many of you have helped me with so many silly questions, I hope you don't mind another. I would love to try my hand at a documentary (specifically, about a military operation that my late father was a part of). I recall someone (I think it was Spot) posting the format requirements for submitting productions to PBS? I don't remember what those requirements are called to even begin a forum search. Red book? Red papers? White papers? Heck I don't know. Anyway, my experience last week combined with the article on guerrilla film making to which Spot recently posted a link have really kindled a fire in me. Sorry to ramble on. I usually silently "troll" this forum absorbing everything I can. I just had to share this experience.
Thanks again for all your help!
This is the first major project I've ever finished. I started with Vegas 4 after convincing my then soon-to-be wife that I needed an editor to create a video montage of us to be played at our wedding. Since then, I've upgraded to VV6 (primarily for the features in DVDA3) and I am hooked. So many of you have helped me with so many silly questions, I hope you don't mind another. I would love to try my hand at a documentary (specifically, about a military operation that my late father was a part of). I recall someone (I think it was Spot) posting the format requirements for submitting productions to PBS? I don't remember what those requirements are called to even begin a forum search. Red book? Red papers? White papers? Heck I don't know. Anyway, my experience last week combined with the article on guerrilla film making to which Spot recently posted a link have really kindled a fire in me. Sorry to ramble on. I usually silently "troll" this forum absorbing everything I can. I just had to share this experience.
Thanks again for all your help!