The greatest part is, it’s not hard at all!
It all starts by learning as much as you can about your subject, and then get started!
That’s it!
Get started by reading my free documentary course here.
Then follow this short video that walks you through the easy steps on how to shoot real-time video without shooting in post, using the GoPro App and the Live Broadcast software to create and edit video clips (including stills).
Then, go ahead and try that out in the full course here (you will lose some of your video camera equipment, so make sure you have some spare batteries to keep it going all the time).
You can read the complete program here!
And as always, if you have questions about the program, feel free to email me your own questions and I’ll do my best to deal with your questions as quickly and effectively as possible.
Thanks for your attention and I’m sure that you will enjoy watching my course as much as I have enjoyed teaching it!
The Supreme Court of New York has ruled that no one can legally enter New York City’s public spaces without a license—including, apparently, the street corners where the sidewalk ends and the street begins.
The case involved a recent police crackdown on unauthorized sidewalk hawkers. The police had arrested about 75 hawkers, but they weren’t always the only ones in the cross hairs. In the last year, several people who were simply walking between the sidewalk and traffic on Manhattan’s West Side Highway were arrested. As a result, the street became a public thoroughfare, and the city ordered the sidewalk removed.
“The sidewalk will continue to serve the public, just not like [it] should be served,” the court’s chief justice, Ruth Bader Ginsburg, wrote in the court’s ruling. “The sidewalks must therefore evolve, evolve into ‘the public forum’ to which the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments are intended to extend.”
Ginsburg’s opinion follows that of the Supreme Court in an earlier case: a 2006 decision which upheld the right of the NYPD to order sidewalk vendors to pull down their umbrellas or face arrests. “The sidewalk is still an integral part (one that’s) integral to all of the city’s public amenities and facilities—including some of the public sidewalks,” Ginsburg wrote. This case, she wrote, “is not about what sort of sidewalk does or doesn’t belong.” Rather, she concluded
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