Past Few Years and Video Progressions

By Riley Stevens


It used to be extremely hard for people to promote and create their own videos only a few years ago. Feature films cost millions of dollars to make, stars cost millions of dollars to hire, it costs millions to put a movie out in theaters, and millions more to advertise it.

Those multimillion dollar spectacles are still around, but they're no longer the only side of film. Today, a $50 investment into a cheap consumer grade video camera can launch you on the path to becoming a respected filmmaker.

You can put together some funny videos with a few friends and start your own sketch comedy troupe with nothing but the camera on your cell phone, or you can create a hilarious stop-motion animated video by borrowing a friend's digital camera and your nephew's play-doh.

Look at a site like Keek and you're going to see a wide variety of videos. Some of them were made by professionals on bigger budgets, but a lot of them were made by people who had no experience, no money, not even any professional equipment, just a camera and some good ideas.

A camera and some good ideas. That's what it takes to make a video today, and a site like Keek.com can help you reach an audience of millions without spending a dime on advertising or distribution.

Young people today take this as a given, just as we grew up taking it as a given that we could watch movies on TV, that we didn't have to go to the theater. We took it as a given that we could get our food from the grocery store and not have to raise it from the ground ourselves.

We had a farming revolution, an industrial revolution, and what we're looking at right now is an artist's revolution, an era when all of the world's knowledge and art can be found in an electronic device smaller than a pocketbook, a time when literally anybody with access to some cheap electronic equipment can make funny videos and show them to the world.

There was a time when people grew up wanting to be famous. Well, dealing with our public image is actually something we all have to consider now. We put out videos or maintain blogs or draw a webcomic and, even if we're just doing it for fun, we wind up having some repute in our chosen field, for good or ill.

It's not just an exciting time if you make funny videos, it's an exciting time to be alive no matter who you are. It's a time when literally anybody can be the next Steven Spielberg or the next George Lucas, a time when all you need to publish a video to millions of people is a webcam or a cell phone or a Flip camera and an internet connection, and you can borrow one of those and get the other one at the local library.




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