Christin's Behind-the-Scenes Sunday š„ : YouTube!
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Dear Ones,
I published my first YouTube video yesterday! Here it is in all its beginner glory:
If you donāt mind, please SUBSCRIBE (I know, I knowā¦) and interact with the post (leave a comment, even just an emoji) to substantially boost the algorithms.
My goal is 1K subs and 4K watch hours (minimum to monetization), and take you along on the journey so you can get there too (if thatās what youād like to do!)
YouTube Development Timeline to 1st Video:
Over 2 weeks to set up my video production space
4 min 50s to film in one take
5 min to make the thumbnail
10 min to add descriptions and tags, upload
The Decent:
Streaming 100 episodes of Evening Drama has helped me do a decent job with a one-take video (you can see the difference in my personal comfort with being filmed between Episode 1 and Episode 100, over the span of 2 years.) Visaās Do 100 Thing framework just works.
The set and lighting setup was done in collaboration with my coach and friend Joshua Berrios. I met Joshua as a fellow host for Flow Club, and I was blown away by how good his video looked compared to the rest of us. It has been instrumental get specific skills coaching as foundation instead of self-teaching through YouTube or a full-blown cohort-based course. As I explained to my friend Lyssa⦠itās like going to the doctor who can diagnose your issues, rather than guessing what they are by yourself.
Some snapshots of the setup evolution (thereās 10X more photos but Iām sparing you the rest):


Dead inside with an oddly empty bookshelf. Very orange.

Weird shadows haunt me. Canāt seem to achieve the ābokehā effect with the blurry background.

Finally understood what Joshua meant when he said I need more separation between myself and the background, duh! Also learned some light theory.
(Iām working on a more detailed piece on how to set video up for more credibility on Zoom in video production. Stay tuned!)
The Work-In-Progress:
Before listing the litany of things to improve, one thing I want to note is that usually this is where I stallāIām pretty good about doing something for the first time, but tend to get stuck when I can see all the problems that need to be fixed. But Iāve finally learned that the key to skill acquisition is INCREASE PRODUCTION VOLUME FIRST. Instead of trying to fix everything, my goal is to fix 1 thing per video over the course of many videos.
Hereās a compilation of issues I spotted the moment I hit stop recording, and kind friends who gave me feedback (keep them coming!)
Look at the LENS and not the screen preview! Duh!
Lean back and not towards the camera, adjust camera height so itās more eye level
Shoot directly, donāt use Zoom (I did this to uh, ātouch up my appearanceā, but Zoomās native resolution is too low and the audio quality isnāt that great.)
Fix overall audio issues (found a tutorial on using OBS to filter micsā¦)
Provide CONTEXT for the story Iām telling (something Iām known to skip IRL tooā¦)
Cut the end part when I look at the screen to hit stop recording
Add visuals when relevant to explanation (I might literally just hold up an iPad with prepared visuals to save some editing time)
Optimize YouTube tags, key words, etc. with tools
My goal is to not spend too much time on any one video to prevent stalling. Here we go!
Warm Wishes,
Christin
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