I have been around still photography long enough to see several transitions.
From black and white to colour (not the beginning, the later ascendancy-not that old), manual to auto focus, film to digital, stills to hybrid.
Through all of that, there has been a common thread of old hands adapting, sharing tricks and growing or falling away and a new generation moving through. The transition has been relatively seamless and each new crop of image makers has had a wealth of support and even healthy competition.
Video has been different.
Most capable videographers were at the top tier, highly specialised, because most other video was shoot and use, not shoot to a higher standard, process to that standard and make a movie or similar. It was too hard, too expensive and most importantly, irrelevant to most end users.
Ironically, stills were harder to take, but easy to use, movies were easy to take, hard to use.
This has meant with the massive growth in this area from entry level through to more serious practitioners, new adopters have basically been left to make their own rules.
The reason I say this is, it is very obvious to me coming in late, that this is the case.
When researching stills gear, techniques and processes, most of the faces I see are close to my own.There are plenty of younger shooters, some suffering from “terminology mis-alignment*”, but on the whole, the pread of photography “experts” spans all generations evenly and all bring something to the game.
When looking to current videographers for information and inspiration, only a very few and these are aligned to more serious presentation formats like “In Depth Cine” or “Studio Binder”, are in my age bracket.
As a rule I am in the hands of those younger than I and often even half my age.
Got no problem with that, as long as they get their facts straight*.
My point is more one of wonderment, that a whole generation of videographers/content creators/Hybrid-ographers are effectively learning their trade at the same time they are creating its shape.
Sony has benefitted from this the most, being the right one at the right time. Nikon has suffered and Canon has teetered on the balance point. Panasonic is the great under-achiever, with similar street cred as Canon in video and plenty of respect, but only now getting it together and Fuji can do as they wish, playing well here or not it seems.
This would not have happened in a purely stills landscape, because as Nikon have proven decade after decade, their stills loyalty base has managed to weather several mis-steps, but in video, they barely rate a mention.
For me personally, it has been fun learning new stuff, but also a little perplexing.
On one hand, the masters ply their trade skilfully and the many watchers analyse what they do.