https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OvwxLP3xKFo
Trying out a new style. Can I replicate this with any subject matter other than this specific thing? Who knows! Do I know what to call this? Well, since LTT apparently took "quick bits" already, no. But I enjoyed making it and hopefully you enjoy watching it ALRIGHT BYE
P.S.: A patron said it would have been nice to see the inside of the thing. That's true, he's right, I even considered it, and I figured you all might like some insight into my process. Andrew, don't take this as criticism, you just gave me a good jumping-off point to talk at length, as if I needed an excuse. :p
It would have been easy to disassemble: four screws, done. The problem is, I'd have to figure out how to get the thing in focus and stable and well lit, so now I'm setting up a camera rig on a hard surface somewhere, and getting a light and monitor display rigged up... in a video that, up to this point, consisted of me just talking into a stationary camera for 20 minutes. Suddenly a lot more time and effort.
Also, I know very little about RF circuitry, so if I had any observations they'd be along the lines of "wow that's a surprisingly large diode," and more likely I'd just have no observations at all so I'd have to say something like "here's the insides, in case you want to see them, I don't know anything about them," and that would trash the flow of the video. That's the thing, see, I think this video flows really well, and that's not something I've been able to manage for a while.
You may have noticed that it's only thirteen minutes long. That's after I added a segment; it was ten, originally, and I was wary of making it any longer. This video sticks just to what's on my mind - these are the thoughts I immediately had about this product and very little more. I did not let myself go off and do a bunch of research because I know I would have ended up talking about 50 other Radio Shack products if I did - sure enough, as soon as this video was over I found out that there was a very similar Realistic system that used FM over phone lines, and had I known that, I would have been compelled to mention it. And then where does it stop?
That would have eaten up three minutes, and if I'd taken the thing apart I would have had to find something to say about the insides, and that would have added five to ten additional minutes. And suddenly the video is 35 minutes long and becoming unwieldy, so I'd decide that I needed to make a proper script in order to keep all the thoughts straight. And well, if we're doing a script we should probably just shoot this in the studio, right?
Ah, but now it's getting serious, so I really need to get my story straight: if I'm going to mention this phoneline model at all, I better find the manual so I don't make any false assumptions... hmm, nobody has the manual online. I guess I should probably buy a pair and wait six days for them to arrive so I can make sure they work the way I think... all for an offhand mention. And hell, if we're this deep in, maybe we should put an oscilloscope on the line and compare the signal between the phone line and power line versions, because I'm sure we're all curious about that...
Two weeks later, I'm putting the finishing touches on an hour and fifteen minute long video that will inevitably contain an error or two because it's simply too long to proofread in its entirety every single time I make a change. Except I don't even get that far because I look at the 19,000 word script and go "oh, another huge one, I better set it aside in the queue behind all the other huge scripts that I've been putting off for months, those take priority." So the thing, which I bought because it looked like A Quick Bit Of Content, becomes another piece of clutter in my studio, eternally unseen by an audience who would very much like to see my clutter. This is basically what happened to Little Guys.
I am trying to figure out how to do things that do not eat up my entire life for a month each time, and that requires saying "no" to a lot of stuff. Up until now I have been saying "yes" to essentially everything, and it isn't really sustainable, because it turns out that every "yes" comes with strings attached that are really hard to see until you've been doing this for long enough to realize just what it costs to add "a quick offhand mention." Basically, once you say "no" to anything, it makes sense to say "no" to a lot.
I think doing so resulted in a video that's fun, has general appeal, is easy to watch, was very easy to produce, and is probably going to do the most collective good in exactly the form it now has, and if I'd changed anything, I'd probably have ruined it. Or... maybe I publish this tomorrow and a week later it has only 15,000 views, the whole experiment is a failure, and I just go back to the way I was doing things. We'll see, I guess.
Carl Seiler
2024-10-18 00:43:06 +0000 UTCWilliam Hyatt
2024-10-18 00:04:46 +0000 UTCDanny Forche
2024-10-17 20:42:41 +0000 UTCEmma May
2024-10-17 18:29:19 +0000 UTCLonely Roman Noise
2024-10-17 18:06:27 +0000 UTCTim Tom
2024-10-17 16:22:47 +0000 UTCRed Dragon
2024-10-17 11:50:44 +0000 UTCadorfer
2024-10-17 10:41:16 +0000 UTCJason Long
2024-10-17 05:58:31 +0000 UTCKris Asick
2024-10-17 05:47:52 +0000 UTCskyhawk
2024-10-17 05:14:57 +0000 UTCScott Kemp
2024-10-17 05:02:41 +0000 UTCRom
2024-10-17 04:04:57 +0000 UTCEyeMWing
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2024-10-17 03:06:26 +0000 UTCKerne
2024-10-17 02:43:57 +0000 UTCChas Becht
2024-10-17 02:42:23 +0000 UTCD. Roscoe
2024-10-17 02:40:41 +0000 UTCXaviette Katzenfrau
2024-10-17 02:39:00 +0000 UTCXaviette Katzenfrau
2024-10-17 02:38:28 +0000 UTCRodney Hubbard
2024-10-17 02:35:16 +0000 UTCMike Barnes
2024-10-17 02:34:41 +0000 UTCMarlo Delfin Gonzales
2024-10-17 02:27:26 +0000 UTCScott Kemp
2024-10-17 02:16:51 +0000 UTCCathode Ray Dude
2024-10-17 02:14:09 +0000 UTCKerne
2024-10-17 02:12:10 +0000 UTC