Comments

winrockpost wrote on 5/23/2010, 7:33 PM
hate it for you there bud
farss wrote on 5/23/2010, 7:38 PM
"Your favorite photo editing software has bunny rabbits as a template."

No, you're really an amateur when you think it matters. The real professionals use the best tool for the job regardless of the largomorphs.

Bob.
BudWzr wrote on 5/23/2010, 9:31 PM
No, I don't use that kind of stuff

You're supposed to add on, like "You know you're a redneck when ......"

Here's another one:

You know you're an amateur when your best HD camera is made by Kodek. Oops, spelled it wrong, it's Kodeck.

John_Cline wrote on 5/23/2010, 9:57 PM
Even when handed a straight line on a silver platter, I'm not going to touch this thread. It would be like shooting fish in a barrel
BudWzr wrote on 5/23/2010, 10:05 PM
You know you're an amateur when a spare OEM rechargeable battery for your camcorder costs 9.99USD, and free shipping at Amazon.
MTuggy wrote on 5/23/2010, 10:22 PM
Not even shooting fish, more like grenade fishing in a barrel.

MT
apit34356 wrote on 5/23/2010, 10:50 PM
"more like grenade fishing in a barrel" extremely messily......... it's like trying to educate an iPhone user to multi-tasking.....yes.... you can talk and browse.... not with iPhone but as a person. ;-)
BudWzr wrote on 5/23/2010, 11:44 PM
Even when handed a straight line on a silver platter, I'm not going to touch this thread. It would be like shooting fish in a barrel

I'm not going to respond to this.
Rory Cooper wrote on 5/24/2010, 1:33 AM
Bud Interesting to note that the word amateur originally meant “lover of “or "passionate about" similar to Connoisseur so some folks although not being so called professional have done amazing work in many different fields
Laurence wrote on 5/24/2010, 5:22 AM
http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/amateurHere is the definition from dictionary.com.[/link]
Laurence wrote on 5/24/2010, 5:28 AM
Some of the best quality work I've seen is done by amateurs. In video, it often seems that the pros are doing weddings, safety videos, product promotions and the like. Amateurs are doing all sorts of interesting things.

Here's a question: If you do boring ass projects professionally, but do art stuff on your own time, do those boring jobs make you a professional?
ushere wrote on 5/24/2010, 6:35 AM
the only thing that separates an amateur from a professional is that the latter gets paid.

now, there's a great many amateurs producing a good deal of better stuff than a lot of professionals, but an mature can indulge their whims, a professional has to stick to the script he's given.

but, there are a few professionals who follow their whims (usually unpaid), and produce some splendid stuff.

i know i'm an amateur cause i still can't take the business seriously after 30+ years...
rs170a wrote on 5/24/2010, 6:54 AM
a professional has to stick to the script he's given.

No matter how boring, useless, complicated or otherwise ineffectual it is.
And it has to look like a multi-million dollar production on a pennies budget too :-)

Mike
FilmingPhotoGuy wrote on 5/24/2010, 7:49 AM
I think the mark a true proffesional would be to do an add for/of washing powder that hadden being done before.
kkolbo wrote on 5/24/2010, 8:14 AM


When your software, hardware, lighting, and camera investment >40 times the total amount ever paid.
musicvid10 wrote on 5/24/2010, 11:04 AM
How about:

"You know you're an amateur when you have the right answer for everything, when you really have no idea what you're talking about."

rs170a wrote on 5/24/2010, 11:21 AM
musicvid, I guess that makes me an amateur husband then because my wife accuses me of doing that daily :-)

Mike
BudWzr wrote on 5/24/2010, 11:32 AM
I think the mark a true proffesional would be to do an add for/of washing powder that hadden being done before.

That's why I never use Babelfish.
BudWzr wrote on 5/24/2010, 11:40 AM
How about:

You know you're an amateur when you throw a lot of technical jargon around to make people think your comment is above reproach.

OR

You answer a post, without fully reading or understanding it, based on a few buzz words you saw, and your answer is just a giant bloviation*.

*Copyright Notice. I hereby retain all rights to the newly coined word "bloviation", which is NOT in the dictionary. This new word should be quite useful here, so I don't want it watered down by constant use.
musicvid10 wrote on 5/24/2010, 11:47 AM
Or, "Never having to admit that you're wrong."
Or, "Never having to say, 'I don't know.'"
John_Cline wrote on 5/24/2010, 12:00 PM
"*Copyright Notice. I hereby retain all rights to the newly coined word "bloviation", which is NOT in the dictionary."

Sorry, Bozo, but "bloviation" IS in the dictionary.

http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/bloviate?db=dictionary

As Dr. Sheldon Cooper would say, "Bazinga!"

That's the problem with you, you have no education or experience so everything you blindly stumble across seems to be some sort of new discovery when in reality this stuff was coined, discovered or has been in use for years and you just didn't know it. You are so proud of the fact that you aren't a professional and that you're blazing these new trails in the art of making video. The fact is that you haven't come up with anything new. Ever. I guarantee that everything you have ever done has been tried before and much of it has been rejected.

Yes, I use "technical jargon" in describing technical concepts. Just because you don't understand it doesn't mean I'm blowing smoke. Seriously, get an education.
BudWzr wrote on 5/24/2010, 12:03 PM
OK, OK, I didn't find it in OneLook.

Copyright hereby released.
busterkeaton wrote on 5/24/2010, 12:07 PM
"*Copyright Notice. I hereby retain all rights to the newly coined word "bloviation", which is NOT in the dictionary."

Wow. Just Wow.

Facepalm.
busterkeaton wrote on 5/24/2010, 12:17 PM
http://www.onelook.com/?w=bloviation&ls=a

The fail is strong with this one.