• @[email protected]
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    463 months ago

    Nah. One video a day gets you practice in all sorts of skills you’ll need if/when you start putting a lot of effort into the quality of the videos. Quality is only half the battle, dealing with deadlines and getting the hours in on the video making/editing programs is crucial.

    • @[email protected]
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      53 months ago

      Deadlines? What deadline is this person under?

      And rushing through and firing out hastily edited videos isn’t good practice for anything.

      • @[email protected]
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        133 months ago

        A self-imposed deadline of making a new video by the end of every day. And rushing through videos absolutely is good practice for a handful of things. Especially if you’ve never edited video at all. It gives you practice just in opening the programs needed and navigating them. Even a hastily edited video is still an edited video that the person needed to learn many aspects of the software to edit. Also, seeing a project through from start to finish you quickly learn that there’s a lot to do at the end of a project after the creative part.

        Some of the most consistent advice from famous creative people is to start out like this. It’s well known that starting with a massive ambitious project is a recipe for failure. IDK if you’ve ever tried to do something like this but it can be very intimidating just to begin if you feel like the first project you work on is personally important to you. Making mediocre videos every day gives you a stress free way to make something creative from start to finish.

      • BlanketsWithSmallpox
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        33 months ago

        You’d be surprised how quickly channels die once you stop putting out a video every week, 3 days, or whatever arbitrary number they or the algorithm is used to.