- Joined
- Aug 12, 2007
- Messages
- 715
For those of you considering shooting a bodybuilding or lifting documentary, be sure to choose your subject carefully. As anyone who has done video editing will tell you, it is very time consuming. Your choice of subject matter must be worth the time you will put into it.
Because of my work with Raising the Bar and Beyond the Pain, people are always coming up to me and saying, "You should do a documentary about ME!" I understand that everyone has a story to tell and that their lives are dramatic to THEM but it is the rare person whose story is interesting enough for OTHER PEOPLE to watch.
Here is my response to people who seriously make this request of me, expecting that I will begin taping them right away:
1. In the past year have you thought to yourself at least three times, "Oh MAN! I wish a camera crew was here to catch what just happened!! That was AMAZING!"
2. When you feel like a failure, are in pain, crying and looking like shit are you ready to have a camera in your face and tell the world about it? After you call the ambulance will you call ME?
3. Can you express your innermost thoughts and feelings eloquently? Have you thought enough about your chosen sport or profession that you can say something new about it and say it in a way that is entertaining and revealing?
4. Can you sustain this level of energy and intimacy for at least a YEAR? That's the minimum amount of time I think it takes to get enough good stuff to make a documentary worth watching.
A good subject must be able to answer a resounding “YES” to all of those questions.
Because of my work with Raising the Bar and Beyond the Pain, people are always coming up to me and saying, "You should do a documentary about ME!" I understand that everyone has a story to tell and that their lives are dramatic to THEM but it is the rare person whose story is interesting enough for OTHER PEOPLE to watch.
Here is my response to people who seriously make this request of me, expecting that I will begin taping them right away:
1. In the past year have you thought to yourself at least three times, "Oh MAN! I wish a camera crew was here to catch what just happened!! That was AMAZING!"
2. When you feel like a failure, are in pain, crying and looking like shit are you ready to have a camera in your face and tell the world about it? After you call the ambulance will you call ME?
3. Can you express your innermost thoughts and feelings eloquently? Have you thought enough about your chosen sport or profession that you can say something new about it and say it in a way that is entertaining and revealing?
4. Can you sustain this level of energy and intimacy for at least a YEAR? That's the minimum amount of time I think it takes to get enough good stuff to make a documentary worth watching.
A good subject must be able to answer a resounding “YES” to all of those questions.