Forgive the ignorance, but I shoot stage performances not weddings. A friend called me in a panic about her daughter's wedding video. We attended her daughter's wedding a year ago.
Apparently her daughter and her son-in-law hired a photographer - videographer in the New York City - New Jersey area called Milton J. Gil Photography.
I would like to know if any of the following business practices are common for wedding videography.
1. They had to pay the entire amount (around $11,000) up front before they were allowed to see any of the photography proofs.
They paid in cash.
2. After a year they still don't have all of the final photos.
3. They were not given a draft video copy for approval, only the final copy of the wedding video a year later.
4. The wedding video had many IMMEDIATE family members either omitted entirely or panned by quickly. At one point some people were in the video that the videographer apparently mistook for immediate family members.
5. The video had many glitches, motion artifacts, and wouldn't play all the way through on any of the DVD players my friend tried in her house.
6. When she called them on the phone she was told that (despite their promise of "satisfaction guaranteed") there wasn't anything they could do about it now.
7. Frustrated, my friend asked for the raw footage and was told that it would be another $500 in cash for the raw footage which they paid.
8. Instead of raw footage they were sent a DVD with three hours of video footage compressed on it that was unplayable and what little did play was worse than a fourth generation VHS tape. When she called to complain she was told by the receptionist that the original tape was "probably erased".
My question is, how much of this stuff is common practice in the wedding videography business?
Thanks,
John
Apparently her daughter and her son-in-law hired a photographer - videographer in the New York City - New Jersey area called Milton J. Gil Photography.
I would like to know if any of the following business practices are common for wedding videography.
1. They had to pay the entire amount (around $11,000) up front before they were allowed to see any of the photography proofs.
They paid in cash.
2. After a year they still don't have all of the final photos.
3. They were not given a draft video copy for approval, only the final copy of the wedding video a year later.
4. The wedding video had many IMMEDIATE family members either omitted entirely or panned by quickly. At one point some people were in the video that the videographer apparently mistook for immediate family members.
5. The video had many glitches, motion artifacts, and wouldn't play all the way through on any of the DVD players my friend tried in her house.
6. When she called them on the phone she was told that (despite their promise of "satisfaction guaranteed") there wasn't anything they could do about it now.
7. Frustrated, my friend asked for the raw footage and was told that it would be another $500 in cash for the raw footage which they paid.
8. Instead of raw footage they were sent a DVD with three hours of video footage compressed on it that was unplayable and what little did play was worse than a fourth generation VHS tape. When she called to complain she was told by the receptionist that the original tape was "probably erased".
My question is, how much of this stuff is common practice in the wedding videography business?
Thanks,
John