Instead, look at the principles they're trying to establish: thorough interviews of a broad variety of sources -- everyone from direct participants to neutral experts. Good B-roll that shows what is being talked about. Frequent use of captions and attribution.
Let's take a peek, shall we?
The benefits of studying abroad, making nice use of still pics as B-roll.
Social media on campus. Good b-roll here. Preview sets up issue; recap get answers to questions. Twitter a good mix of main ideas, quotes and data.
Downtown restaurants. Look at how the neutral experts set the background and offer explanations. Plus, look at the variety of B-roll and the use of captions to highlight key points.
Roommate conflicts. In this video, instead of letting Subject A say everything in one shot, and then Subject B saying everything in one shot, we go back-and-forth between A and B. It makes the interviews more conversational in tone. After all, when we talk in groups, it's back-and-forth, without the need for any one person to say everything at once, right?
Pets on campus. Basic, to-the-point style.
Is 'Jersey Shore' degrading to women? We even have a neutral expert in this vid!
The Old Town neighborhood. Lots of varied B-roll. This was the first general topic vid project ever for a student who has since graduated and now is a reporter at a Lansing TV station!
Do these give you any new ideas on how you'd like to do YOUR video, or the best ways to do it?
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