And this kind of pacing is what i believe needs to be re-introduced. I
worked for a television station for a while and editing the pacing was
the most challenging. everything had to be snap, snap, snap. it is
amazing what the humans eye has adapted to in terms of how fast it can
read images. is this scary? or, is it part of the evolution process?
certainly, it is. but, are we leading ourselves in the wrong
direction? i think it is ironic that even the term "back to basics" is
as commercial as anything else. Do we document this as a problem, or
just a celebration of humans evolving into a new kind? These are the
kinds of seemingly unanswerable questions that make me want to
document, like WISEMAN, to discover with no pre-convictions.
worked for a television station for a while and editing the pacing was
the most challenging. everything had to be snap, snap, snap. it is
amazing what the humans eye has adapted to in terms of how fast it can
read images. is this scary? or, is it part of the evolution process?
certainly, it is. but, are we leading ourselves in the wrong
direction? i think it is ironic that even the term "back to basics" is
as commercial as anything else. Do we document this as a problem, or
just a celebration of humans evolving into a new kind? These are the
kinds of seemingly unanswerable questions that make me want to
document, like WISEMAN, to discover with no pre-convictions.
