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What are movies/videos/documentaries you wish existed?

 
pollinator
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There's so much out there in the video media world!  

There are hundreds of homesteading channels, how-to videos, environmental docuseries, and insightful scientific journeys of discovery.  There are free short second snippets, subscription services and series, downloadable or rentable DVDs, and ad-bombarded online video playlists.   It's endless.  

Within it all there are tried and tested "experts", opinionated talking heads, newbie influencers hoping to gather a following or a "like", crafty entrepreneurs hoping to make a buck, organizations wanting to change the world with good (or perhaps questionable) ideas, and good honest elders hoping to help their fellow mankind.  And everything in between!

My grandfather used to tell my dad...

My grandfather wrote:"Son, if you can read, you can do anything"


Perhaps the modern equivalent is "Son, if you can find a video of it online, you can learn to do anything."

But what would you say is missing?  Or better yet, what do like and what do you hope for?

What are some (permaculture-related) movies, videos, documentaries, series, snippets, or other media that you *wish* existed?  

Specifically, I'm wondering about:

1) Substance.
What are topics you'd like to learn more about, or see done in the video realm?
Maybe they already exist in bulk, but you just want *more* of them because they're informative or wholesome or uplifting?

I'm also curious about...

2) Style. What do you dislike?  What about video personalities?  Are there styles that just drive you nuts?  What kind of video media do you like?  What is something you wish to see more of?
 
George Yacus
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Developing my own preference list...

I like!
+Big projects.  
+Anything with ponds and water. ~~~~
+Full permaculture design, start to finish.
+Projects that fast forward in time to show side by side "before and after" transformation.  
+Design competitions.  
+Things that are legally above board.  
+Documentaries or how-to videos that acknowledge and address local legal or governmental regulations/hurdles/constraints/procedures/code/ "doing it right". +Videos that clarify and explain exceptions to the rules (work-arounds), or which show how to effect systemic change.
+Engineering.  Nerd-ing out.
+Projects which salvage natural, surplus, or commonly wasted materials.
+Skillful how-to videos that the average person could actually do with strong effort, not just a master craftsman with expensive tools or training.
+Instant follow up of long term projects --> Longevity reports. Not just "How I did this" but "How did it turn out months/years later, and would I do it the same way again?" In the same video, not a separate video.
+Comparisons & experiments.  "We did method (A) on this plant/structure, and method (B) on that plant, and after one season, here are the results"
+Super quick how-to snippets and techniques.
+Short, memorable intros and outros e.g. "if you like this sort of thing, come on out..." and "May your thumbs, always be green"  or "Oooi, Geoff Lawton 'eeya"
+Uniform title screens (I like how Living Web Farms has all their video title screens with similar font and style, making it easy to find videos from a series.)
+Home improvement how-to's with an obvious expert.  Expertise in general.
+Safety conscious leaders.
+Permaculture workshop tag alongs for unique events; (Even if they're slow, I can still watch them on 2x speed.)
+Whenever a workshop speaker repeats a question from an audience member so that it actually can be heard in the microphone.
+Previews of learning objectives and system diagrams at the beginning of a videos.  Today we will learn (1)(2)(3)(4)(5), followed by expansion and detail throughout the rest of the video.
+Claims of "This is how I did X project"  vs a novice passing off their how-to video as "This is how you do X."  Seth from Land to House is a positive example of someone who has developed expertise, but is really humble about it.
+Links and companion sheets, with equipment or material supplies used, so that viewers can repeat a project's success.
+David Pagan Butler's voice.  Man could be saying literally anything, and it will still come across as luxurious.

If I made videos, I would probably avoid...
-Burying the lede, especially to reach a time limit to feed algorithms.  Longer is not better.  e.g.  "Here are 5 ways to feed your plants without fertilizer!" and twenty minutes later, I as the viewer am like "that could have been done in 2 minutes".
-Excess repetition of info, unless it is a really detailed step by step kind of thing, or counter-intuitive concept that needs to really sink in.
-Livestreams with people looking and talking into their camera while driving a vehicle.  Focus on operating your machine!
-Embedded advertisement monologues that suddenly sneak into the middle of a video "this video was sponsored by...".  
-Phony walking/driving by cameras.  --> Whenever someone has a solo travel show without a camera person, and they obviously put down a camera specifically to walk past it, and will have to immediately walk right back up to pick up the camera.
-"Like, subscribe, and ring the bell!" said more than once in any video.
-Looooong, flashy, intros.  Logos are cool and everything, but make the content the coolest part!
 
pollinator
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Drone shots of land are really cool.  Really gives you perspective.  Before and after drone shots would be great.

Haul videos, as in harvest hauls.  There are gobs and gobs of establishment videos where people show off their newly planted 2-3 ft tall trees.  I want to see them after 5-10 years and the full baskets of fruit and nuts!

Videos that show tips and tricks for fast, efficient processing and preservation techniques.  I burn a lot of energy planting, tending, harvesting, then have to dig deep for the energy to spend hours in the kitchen processing and cooking.
 
George Yacus
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Earlier, I wrote:What are some (permaculture-related) movies, videos, documentaries, series, snippets, or other media that you *wish* existed?  



My current video ideas...

1) "Beautiful Hügels" - Where are all the pretty mounds?  For Hügels to go mainstream, don't they need to be...beautiful?  Are Hügelkulturs always ugly and random, or can they be "neat"?   An attempt (or call for competition!) to make the most beautiful and productive Hügelkultur garden arrangements.

2) "Permaculture Bugout" - In 7 days how much permaculture can one man do with basic tools on a limited budget?  Tools or supplies limited by cost, and/or size, weight, or means of conveyance (i.e. the permaculture gardener's tools are constrained by what could fit in a fanny pack, or backpack, or bicycle and trailer, or car/SUV/truck full, etc. and must be less than $100, or $1000, or $10,000, or 1 gallon gas, 10 gal gasoline, yada yada.)

3) "Permaculture Boogie" - After 30 days of dedicated homesteading, how much can one man accomplish in a grid down situation on weedy land... with no gasoline, but plenty of good music?

4) "Bamboo-ya!" - Bamboo A to Z.  Turning bamboo into a different project, every week.

5) "Let it Grain!" - Growing rice, wheat, buckwheat, oats, corn, and more with no prior experience.

6) "Stick 'em up!  Robbing the (seed)bank"  - How much food can one actually produce from one of those retail survival "seedbanks" without fertilizer?  What happens if you try to plant the whole seedbank all at once?  How much land will it take up?  How much of it will grow if you follow the directions exactly?  (All food grown perhaps to be donated to a local Foodbank?)

7) "Getting dirty underground, Part 1 and 2" - How long will it take and what will it cost?
1. Making a small Oehler structure, solo without a tractor.  
2. With assistance and with a tractor.  

8) "The long haul" - Cutting and moving big 'ol logs through rough terrain, and raising them up high -- without a car or tractor!
 
I agree. Here's the link: https://woodheat.net
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