Susie Lynn, the producer of those segments, goes in and lays all the voices over the video.
These days there's so much technology and ways you can learn. There are videos and CD roms.
When I left EastEnders, I could have earned an absolute fortune from sexy calendars, shoots for lads' mags, fitness videos and reality shows. But I always turned them down.
I don't even like DVDs. Honest to God, in my lifetime, I might have rented a dozen DVDs, literally gone into a video store and rented a dozen DVDs in my lifetime, because I don't like to see movies that way. I like to see them on the big screen.
Look, I really do not care about you. What I care about is the worlds that you bear witness to. You are nothing more than a dog with a video camera strapped on its back. As you walk the streets looking for a place to mate or piss or eat, the camera is on and we will see the world because of you... You carry the camera and we enjoy the world. (On images as autobiography)
You have to be aware that whenever you leave your house, you're probably going to be photographed by someone somewhere. Maybe those pictures will surface. Maybe they won't. Maybe those videos will surface. Maybe they won't. But you have to always be aware that it could be happening.
I always feel kind of awkward when I look at pictures of myself. Watching videos of myself is really uncomfortable.
A lot of my video work is super lo-fi on purpose. I'm not trying to become technically super proficient. The only thing I'm interested in becoming technically proficient on is my alto saxophone.
I do want to direct, eventually. I don't know if it will be a short film or a music video or a feature, but I know that I want to at least try it and see.
I don't have many expenses as a college student (mostly food) so I'm able to put advertising revenue right back into the production of new videos.
I think video is a mega trend, almost as big as mobile.
Video for the Internet has become a testing ground for mediums that actually have revenue.
When you see yourself on video, you and your friends spending time on vacation, and they take a video, and then you see it, it's really disturbing.
When I first had a video camera to document a performance, it was in Sweden and I remember it was really crucial for me.
I didn't give any instruction to the video, because it was a new medium. I didn't know what to tell him; it was so young. I did the piece and immediately after the piece, I wanted to see the material.
[George Michael] is a great songwriter and he makes very classy videos, like me.
I used to be a video game freak, but I've kind of like eased back.
Anytime I shoot a video, I just think of anything I can do to set myself apart from everybody in the music industry.
I started studying filmmakers, and I would say early on the ones that really inspired me the most were like the field magicians of music videos.
TV is just a huge tablet. It’s just a platform to consume long-form video.
Access to high quality video content -- essentially TV programming -- has never been better than today
No. You know what really bugs me about my videos? When they can't figure out what to do, they just have me change clothes five times.
People talk about the All Woman video to this day.
Im a techno moron. I need help just to plug in my video camera.
I'll know I'm reaching the total American market when I'm asked to do a video for MTV.