Waveform: The MKBHD Podcast - Your Favorite Creators' Favorite Cameras!
Episode Date: April 30, 2025Ever wondered what camera something was shot on? Then you might just be the type of person that will find this obsessive kind of deep dive interesting! Studio producers Eric and Rich talked with creat...ors like Casey Neistat, Becca Farsace, Inga Lam, Tyler Stalman and many more about which cameras are taking up space in their gear bags. Why did Casey switch to Sony when he was vlogging? Why not just use iPhones? We have the answers in this weeks bonus episode! Special thanks to all the creators we spoke to! Special thanks to all the creators we spoke to go watch their stuff! Austin Evans: https://www.youtube.com/@austinevans Inga Lam: https://www.youtube.com/@IngaLam Brittney Janae: https://www.youtube.com/@BrittneyJanae Joshua De La Victoria : https://www.youtube.com/@JoshuaDeLaVictoria Shua Films: https://www.youtube.com/@shua_films Stewart Hicks: https://www.youtube.com/@stewarthicks Casey Neistat: https://www.youtube.com/@casey Jetlag the game: https://www.youtube.com/@jetlagthegame Brandon Y Lee: https://www.youtube.com/@brandonylee Tyler Stalman: https://www.youtube.com/@stalman Colt Kirwan: https://www.youtube.com/@ColtKirwan Becca Farsace: https://www.youtube.com/@BeccaFarsace Michael Tobin: https://www.youtube.com/@initialfocus Links: Media Division: https://www.youtube.com/@MediaDivision Andy To: https://www.youtube.com/@andyto Music provided by Epidemic Sound Shop the merch: https://shop.mkbhd.com Socials: Waveform: https://www.threads.net/@waveformpodcast Marques: https://www.threads.net/@mkbhd Andrew: https://www.threads.net/@andrew_manganelli David: https://www.threads.net/@davidimel Adam: https://www.threads.net/@parmesanpapi17 Ellis: https://twitter.com/EllisRovin TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@waveformpodcast Join the Discord: https://discord.gg/mkbhd Music by 20syl: https://bit.ly/2S53xlC Waveform is part of the Vox Media Podcast Network. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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See app for details. There was a camera called this
Canon
I cannot believe I can't remember the name of this camera
What the you got to look this out?
No, okay. I'm gonna describe it to you. I have two I have two of them my office the most beautiful camera
What is going on people of the internet? Welcome back to another episode of the waveform podcast.
We're your hosts.
I'm Marques.
I'm David.
And if you're watching the video version, you've already noticed that David is next
to me, which means on the other side, we've got two new hosts for this bonus episode.
That's right.
You're not seeing things.
It's not Friday.
You can still do dishes, but we have some extra fun stuff to talk about
in the world of YouTube creators and their camera choices.
So, without any further ado, Eric and Rich, take it away.
Hello. Hello.
Hello. That was pretty great.
Dude, yes, so I'm Eric, I'm one half of the studio channel.
Rich and I are regularly confused in the studio.
Pretty much everyone thinks that we are the same person.
That is a good thing.
So hello, I'm Eric.
Many people refer to me as Rich, that is okay.
Hello, I'm Rich and no one refers to me as Eric.
That is not true.
That happened 10 minutes ago, Adam.
Call you Eric.
That's true, ago. Adam called you Eric. That's true.
Thanks.
Rich, what do we do for a living?
Yeah, me and Eric, we're the studio producers and we make our behind the scenes videos here
at MKBHD.
So our last big behind the scenes video, we got a lot of feedback that it just didn't feel
super attainable, that there's only so much about
behind the scenes at MKBHD that can be actionable for people.
So we had an idea to do pretty much the biggest
behind the scenes video in history.
Yeah, so we decided to talk to some of our favorite creators
ranging from 20,000 subscribers all the way up to 20 million.
And well, you know, almost 20 million.
Any day now, subscribe to the MKBHD channel.
Marques needs more subs.
And our goal is to not just understand what cameras these creators really like,
but really to answer the question,
does gear even really matter in YouTube in 2025?
The answer is a lot more nuanced than I think we were expecting.
Yeah.
Yeah, I feel like in the world of
what camera do you use on YouTube?
There are some trends.
There are some historical trends.
There are some current modern day popular options,
but there isn't really like any one standout number one
that I can think of as far as a single model.
Don't know if I agree with that. But I do think there are standout brands one that I can think of as far as a single model. Don't know if I agree with that.
But I do think there are standout brands that are dominating.
OK, well, there's evidence for and against that.
OK, OK.
So the first camera brand that we wanted to start with is a camera brand
we're very familiar with here and a lot of people aren't very familiar with.
Mr. Red Marquez Brownlee.
Red.
A lot of creators see red as this sort of aspirational brand.
Oh, maybe one day I could shoot on a red camera.
So we wanted to bring in one creator
who actually shoots all their videos on red
and another who bought a couple of red cameras
but isn't really using them anymore.
Why do you shoot your videos on red?
Let's start there.
We talked to other creators who-
Wait, you mean Nikon?
They got bought by Nikon. But I do shoot red. I do start there. We talked to other creators who- Wait, wait, you mean Nikon? Well, they got bought by Nikon,
but I do shoot red.
I do shoot red.
That was a deep cut, sorry.
I can really give you,
I can break it down to basically two main reasons
why I shoot red.
I was shooting Canon for a very long time,
up until around 2015, I think.
Wow, it's been a decade.
Old.
Yeah, I know.
But the two reasons that I switched
to my first ever red camera,
which was an Epic W, I believe, at the time. Epic W. Really? That was when it my first ever red camera, which was an Epic W I believe at the time.
At work.
It was really that small?
Oh yeah, it was called the red Epic W.
Oh man.
Or maybe it was a Scarlett W before the Epic W.
But one resolution, two color science.
So one resolution was I was shooting 1080i,
wanna see 100?
And I was looking for my first 4K camera
and I skipped right to the the red raw 4K camera
and it was plenty sharp and that was like
one of my criteria for a new camera.
The other was it had this amazing color science
and I could change the white balance after I shot,
which was this neat little thing called raw video
and the colors looked amazing.
I could really make videos look the way I wanted them to.
So for people that don't know, when your camera,
when you take video, generally your camera
is compressing that video, it's applying basically
a LUT or lookup table effectively to it
by compressing it into an MP4 or something like that,
and it's making a bunch of decisions about color.
RAW video is just a lot of the information,
most of the information is taking in.
It's not completely real raw, raw, you know, video.
That sounds like a...
Compressed raw.
Google Gaga, Lady Gaga.
Sorry, Lady Gaga lyric.
But yeah, it's compressed raw because it takes it in
but because of that, it's not applying,
it's allowing you to still adjust those values
like white balance, so.
I feel like the, working here,
working with RED is relatively easy,
in large part because Rich does most of the shooting,
but also we have great computers
for a good, healthy post workflow.
But we called with Austin Evans,
who actually accidentally bought two red cameras.
Accidentally?
Yeah, you wanna?
Sure, I believe Austin had Scarlett W on pre-order
and then Epic W came out, so he bought that.
And then they sold it.
Can't believe they called it that.
You didn't like the W for weapon?
Epic W.
The W's not for weapon, right?
Really hard to fly with these cameras.
Yeah.
Yes.
So before working here, I was a cinematographer
and I got to work with our good friend, Austin Evans,
and he had a much different experience shooting red.
Very different.
But the problem was, it was a bad camera.
Like yes, if you have a whole film crew
and a technical department and a whole lot of patients,
it was lovely.
But the problem was, you know,
like there was one shoot where we were in Austin.
So we were doing a shoot with Audi.
We were on Circus of the Americas, you know, an actual proper F1 track and it is
Texas in summer and it was like a hundred degrees outside.
The red completely gave out on us 15 minutes in the shoot, like just
wouldn't power on.
It wasn't like overheated necessarily.
It just, just gave up, right?
Um, so luckily we had like an a 6,500 as a B cam, which we had to shoot
the rest of the video on.
That was one of those moments.
I'm like, this is not it.
Red had its moments, but even when we shot red, we shot in progress.
Like we didn't, we never ever, ever use the AK cause who needs AK right?
Eh, especially back, you know, six, seven years ago.
So, uh, we still technically have our red and it is a lovely paperweight.
I mean, we got, mean we gotta make something clear.
Like red cameras are studio cameras.
They are used for movies, right?
In very controlled environments.
It was a weird thing when Marques and Austin
and Jonathan Morrison and Lou went and decided
to buy red cameras for YouTube videos.
Like that was extremely novel.
It's still novel.
It's still novel, because the newest models
are still extremely expensive.
You can get a Scarlett W for like $3,000 now,
but back then, that was like, nobody was doing that.
Even if you bought the Scarlett W for $3,000,
that's the thing about red cameras,
is people will think that a red camera
is something that's like,
maybe something to consider as a creator.
Like, oh, I'm gonna work my way up
and build out a red ecosystem.
Yeah.
Yeah.
That's probably not a good idea.
It's a locked off kind of situation.
Probably not a good idea.
I would say a red camera is the equivalent of,
it's a sensor in a little box,
and that box is a computer.
Yeah.
With fans and, you know, memory and all this other compute.
And you can attach as much or as little to this box
as you want to build it out for whatever you're shooting.
So if you've ever seen a Hollywood movie set,
it's built out to the size of a dog.
I'm trying to make it like a size reference.
It's got multiple monitors and a ton of cables
coming out of it and it's got,
obviously the memory isn't plugged into the side,
but it's got all accessories for shooting external memory
and all this other stuff.
It's the brain.
It's not ergonomic at all.
You might have two or three handles on it
for maybe that one time they're gonna do
that one handheld shot for that thing they planned
for that thing that next day,
but it is very much not like the C100 I came from,
which is built for one person to shoot everything. So the single shooter camera experience is very much not like the C100 I came from, which is built for one person to shoot everything.
So the single shooter camera experience is very different.
That said, I've been able to build out my version
of a single camera shooter RED.
I found just the right set of handles,
top handle, record button, monitor, accessories,
that for me, it's just light enough
and just ergonomic enough that I can make it work.
And it's worth it because the footage
that comes out of that box is second to none.
I have not seen anything come close to touching
the quality of a red image off that sensor.
We're gonna notice a pattern where
if you're a tech YouTuber or like a knowledge YouTuber,
you end up seeing like pretty weird camera choices
because the environments that you're shooting in
are relatively controlled.
And the more that creators move into niches or spaces
where the environments are less controlled,
I think the more they all congregated around like two brands.
Okay.
But let's wait until we hit those brands
because Red was recently bought by Nikon.
And we were not really thinking about bringing Nikon
into this video.
Nikon hasn't really had a rep,
especially in like video for creators.
But when we hopped on the phone with Becca Forsachi,
who is like, como se dice, the goat.
She said like. I think this will come as a surprise to most
that I actually use predominantly Nikon systems now.
We asked like, what do you like about it?
And she described the image as like.
Describing color is weird,
but there's something about it
that feels like homier and cozier.
Whereas Sony, I feel like is very sharp, a little bit punchy.
And yeah, Nikon just naturally right out of camera, I can have something that I'm really pleased with.
Yeah, Nikon has had a bit of a renaissance in the last like two or so years, primarily because
they were pretty late to move to mirrorless. So a mirrorless camera is a camera where it takes in
the image, it goes straight to the sensor, and then you see what the sensor sees. Whereas a normal camera DSLR
has a mirror that you see what the mirror sees, which is not the actual image or exposure.
While everybody else, well not everybody else, but most of the other brands were on these
like second, third generation mirrorless cameras. Nikon was just releasing their first camera,
their first mirrorless cameras, Nikon was just releasing their first mirrorless camera.
Yeah, no, we were all, all the kids in the YouTube
cook groups I was in back in the day,
that's what we called them instead of group chats.
Pretty much everyone switched to the Sony ecosystem
around this time and never looked back,
because Sony was really the first manufacturer
bringing this cheap mirrorless.
I guess Panasonic kind of beat them, but.
Micro four thirds.
Yeah, it's different.
We'll get into it.
Do you have context, David,
on why Nikon was so slow to switch?
I think that it's not too dissimilar to why Kodak was so,
even though they invented the digital camera,
they just were like, no.
They were just having so much success.
And Canon and Nikon are the two,
they were the two biggest camera brands, right?
They were making all of the money,
and they were making all the money on SLRs and DSLRs.
And so they were like,
I don't really think there's a huge benefit
to this technology.
Our photographers are super used to using DSLRs.
Yeah, I don't know.
I think people had just gotten really in their way
about it. Also, the Nikon crowd tended to be either older people who were
shooting like bird photography or like wildlife photography. Nikon is famous
for bird photography. You will very rarely meet any other brand that shoots
bird photography.
They're the one with the cheetah on the box, right?
Yeah.
Yeah, all sense.
And then they also are very popular for concert photography.
So, cause their low light used to be,
well, it still is very good, but for that reason as well.
So I was talking to Becca about like
where Nikon goes in the future.
Like, are we going to see a Nikon comeback,
especially with like the red kind of acquisition.
Yeah, I guess acquisition.
I have no knowledge of what's gonna happen,
but I think reds are very expensive systems.
Not only is the camera expensive,
but the amount of footage that you're gonna shoot
is gonna take up a lot of hard drive space.
Hard drives are expensive.
And I wonder if Nikon, who is really affordable cameras,
they price their cameras very competitively.
Coming together with RED means
that we're gonna get something that's more affordable
with the RED logo on it, or in a RED camera.
I wonder, I don't know.
I can only hope.
Do you guys think that the future of this acquisition
is like more and more people could buy red cameras?
Like maybe, because it sounds like Nikon is relatively accessible now, but no one's just thinking about it.
Maybe people are going to start thinking about red cameras.
I think there is some level of cache attached to the red name from the red epic and the red mysterious dragon.
And back in the day, they were very big in the cinema world
and the directors that shot with red,
like they have that cache.
So weirdly I feel like it could be Nikon
or as they actually said it to me
when I talked to them recently, Nikon.
It could be their way of going up into that cinema world.
Yeah, Nikon.
I believe that's the correct pronunciation, Nikon, right?
Really?
Yeah.
No, don't say that. I know none of us have said it like that. That's apparently correct pronunciation. Yeah. Really? Yeah. No, don't say that.
I know none of us have said it like that.
That's apparently how it's said.
But yeah, it could be the other way around as well.
It could be some of RED and bringing their technologies
down in price and more accessible into Nikon cameras
if they get there.
So just about two weeks ago,
so RED makes a camera called the Komodo,
which is by the way, their most affordable camera.
They actually made that camera in response
to all of these mirrorless cameras being more and more
affordable for creators.
They wanted to offer this in-between spot,
where it's more expensive than a mirrorless camera,
but it's still a cinema camera.
So just about two weeks ago, they
started selling one with a Nikon Z mount
Which is the lens mount that the Z series Nikon mirrorless cameras have so now they sell both on the
Komodo as well as I believe on the newest one
That what is the one that you have your after V Raptor? Yeah I think they also have a mount for the V Raptor now that Nikon Z lenses can go on too
So it is very early, by the way, in the acquisition.
It only officially went through quite recently,
and it's quite surprising that they're doing this.
They did that.
The other thing that they have done
in the last month or so is Nikon can shoot Z raw internally.
And there's all of this, or N raw, sorry, N raw, not Z raw.
There's all of this lore as to Nikon and
red suing each other over internal raw video compressed raw compressed raw video
eventually Nikon just bought red and they dropped the lawsuit but convenient
convenient I wonder if these two unrelated factors are connected but the
enra that the Nikon Z6 series and z9 and whatever can shoot
Red they just announced a bunch of LUTs with red that try to give it the red sensor
Look on these Nikon cameras. Yeah, so it's clearly not gonna be exactly the same. It is a lot is a lookup table
It's not the same as the sensor technology
But they are working together in ways
to bring the red cache to Nikon
and to bring the Nikon accessibility to red.
Yeah.
Okay, so speaking of accessibility,
we dove into Blackmagic with two creators
who are cinematographers by day,
Michael Tobin and Brittany Genet,
and also have their own YouTube channels
about cinematography.
Rich, could you give us context on black magic?
How do people think about black magic?
I feel like people think about black magic
as the accessible Alexa,
in the sense that the color science is beautiful,
easy to work with.
Great menu system.
Yeah, the only thing they're lacking, autofocus,
which is a big thing.
It is.
Yeah. But it's deeper than that. Okay, so when we talked to Michaelofocus, which is a big thing. It is. Well, but it's deeper than OK.
So when we talked to Michael Tobin, he gave this great analogy.
He said, I think the easiest way to put it is they're very similar to Apple,
that they have their own kind of walled garden, right?
They make the camera, they make the codec, they make the software.
They have the best color grading software on the planet.
And so you just have this beautiful workflow
throughout the whole way.
You can actually get DaVinci Resolve Studio
when you buy a Blackmagic camera.
This is the only camera brand you buy
where you also get a full stack professional grade
video editing software thrown in there.
Yeah.
Unless you count Red Cinex.
Most people don't.
No one chops it.
Yeah, yeah, that's crazy.
So his whole thing is like,
you can build a full workflow with Blackmagic.
When we talked to Brittany, she was just like,
wow, the image quality is so beautiful.
It's such a beautiful sensor
that comes out the Blackmagic.
And I think, you know, a lot of times with social media,
it's really hard to explain characteristics of a camera
and the differences of why you would go
for different cameras. But for me, when I had the Blackmagic 6K it was when I wanted to get into
actual filmmaking. So shooting short films and I think that really the image quality really set it
apart because you were getting this beautiful cinematic image for like such a low price.
And it's one of those things where
like I know we all talk about like what cinematic is but to me owning both
cameras the FX3 and the Blackmagic I don't have to put diffusion on a Blackmagic
glass it's automatically a softer look coming out of the camera itself it pairs
really nicely with a lot of lenses because of like the image quality that
it has it has false quality that it has.
It has false color, so it has certain aspects that you would use in filmmaking that makes it easier for you on set.
And if you want to grow from just, you know, like doing like the everyday content
to being a filmmaker, it's just a good transitional camera.
She was using her Blackmagic for YouTube and then she stopped using it for another camera brand.
her Blackmagic for YouTube and then she stopped using it for another camera brand.
There are like some pretty clear downsides
to shooting Blackmagic that we were able
to get into with them.
Have either of you guys shot Blackmagic?
Yeah, yeah.
I've gotten very close multiple times,
but always got scared away at the last second.
Yeah, okay, what was?
Whether it was because of the workflow,
I don't want to have to use DaVinci Resolve,
or if it was because of, you know,
I've seen a lot of, so you say the sensor is beautiful
and the color science is great.
I've watched, maybe this is from the beginning, early days,
I've watched a lot of test footage that I didn't like
from the Blackmagic cameras.
Really?
And so if I were ever to switch cameras,
I would want it to at least match
what I thought I was getting out of my current camera,
and I never thought that Blackmagic was doing that.
Maybe it's much closer now,
and I know there's the URSA 8K and all sorts of other stuff,
but I haven't seen test footage that tempted me.
So, yeah.
Well, ironically, so Blackmagic is like the,
generally like the cheaper version of a RED,
in that it allows you to shoot RAW video.
This was like, it was one of the alternatives
that gave you that RAW capability,
and generally when you're shooting raw,
we are different because we have extremely controlled
lighting where you just want the highest quality image
at a normal look.
But most of the time when you're shooting raw,
you're actually shooting raw
because you want to stylize your image.
Or correct for it.
We just shot the Pixel 9a hands-on in New York City.
The worst lighting. Rich and I were, yeah, weird lighting,
like spotlights with these orange lights,
and then go outside for a few minutes and shoot out there,
and then shoot in the hallway and then come back inside.
It's like, I don't want to have to do
some sort of manual white balancing every time.
In post, we can nail every single shot
with perfect white balance.
Which, by the way, when I worked at Android Authority,
was the most annoying freaking thing.
There'd be like 50 of us reporters in one room
and all of our videos look horrible
because the lighting was terrible, super yellow,
and then we'd all watch Marquez's video
and it would be perfect.
Yeah, you're like, that's the advantage of red, right?
That's the red, that's why she red.
Dude, it's so funny talking to you guys about this
because I think when we talk to creators,
their take on why they didn't like Black Magic
had nothing to do with color.
Yeah.
The big reason is like.
Up until the Pixis, the body style on the Pocket series
is a reason a lot of people hated it,
because it was this DSLR vibe,
but also cinema camera components
that just didn't make a lot of sense.
Battery life is rough. That's definitely didn't make a lot of sense. Battery life is rough.
That's definitely, you need a lot of those.
I'd say the biggest downfall is people like autofocus and there's no Blackmagic cameras
that have any autofocus to it.
It's just more to the workflow than just being able to put a card in, shoot it, take it out
and put it in your computer.
So it's just the fact that I still have to use V-mounts,
get all my cords out, all of those things.
It's just like, all right, chill.
And because it's not auto-focus,
I have to use a monitor on it so I can see myself
and make sure that I can try to manually focus
to make sure I'm in focus.
There's no auto-focus.
Yeah.
On the more affordable ones.
Especially if you're a single person shooting,
you just wanna have auto-focus to know that you're in focus.
It's...
I get it.
Yeah, it makes sense if you're a prosumer, I think,
and if you're making a lot of YouTube videos.
I think if you're a DP, or you're saying like...
The solo shooter.
If you're a young DP, I think a Pocket 6K
could be in your universe.
Especially if you have a crew
and you're in controlled environments for lighting.
Yeah, like a relatively small camera crew.
There are certainly better cinema cameras.
Well, maybe not certainly.
I guess it depends on how much you really like Resolve.
Because so much of this is like,
can you dial in the right post workflow with Resolve
to feel really confident that everything you shoot with Blackmagic, you can get a unique image.
Yeah. The thing about Blackmagic, especially a number of years ago, was that they were like
the cheaper red in that the bodies were made of a light plastic. So they were also sort of just a
camera brain computer, but in a much cheaper body.
They didn't have any sort of like flip out screen
or anything where you could see yourself.
They were very much like, we took the parts that you need
and we put some stuff around it and here,
just like shoot the raw video, do it all in post.
And because of that, they didn't include the things
like auto-focus and like these other capabilities.
They were also adapting to everyone else's lenses,
so they didn't really have the control
that a native camera brand that has their own lenses
can do either.
So one last, I guess, quote on Blackmagic.
We talked to Brandon Lee, who was the head of cinematography
for Linus Tech Tips, and they briefly shot every video on Short Circuit,
which our boy Johnno was responsible for at one point.
Thank you, Johnno, for providing the money
for my employment.
Anyways, Short Circuit on LTT was all black magic
for a little while, and Brandon said they ran into some pretty frustrating
technical issues, just in terms of how they manage,
I think it was mostly like codec management.
And there were a lot of things that because black magic
is proprietary, you have to build out these workflows
that in theory could be better.
But you almost need to be like a black magic domain expert
in order to get these cameras to be like,
excellent, excellent cameras.
I think it takes time for mastery over these.
You could say that about a lot of cameras,
but Blackmagic especially,
because of its relationship with software and the hardware.
So yeah, Blackmagic has this software
called DaVinci Resolve that they acquired
quite a long time ago in 2009 or so.
And it used to mostly be a color editor.
You would bring your footage into that software
just to do the color, but over the last four or five years,
they've updated it over and over again,
and now it's a quite strong non-linear editor.
So a lot of people have left both Premiere and Final Cut over to here, especially if they have a Blackmagic camera because it is a lot of people have left both Premiere and Final Cut
over to here, especially if they have a Blackmagic camera
because it is a lot different,
it's a lot better for that footage.
And it also uses these things like nodes and whatever.
But yeah, I think if you invest in the Blackmagic system
and you commit to it, but it's probably a little bit tough
to do that in like a studio like Linus Tech Tips
where you gotta teach everyone a bunch of new things
and teach everyone a specific workflow.
Especially if you have an old workflow.
If you build from the ground up with black magic in mind,
it could actually probably be a very efficient stack,
but you need to take the time to understand the tech.
All right, David, I would take a quick sip of Red Bull
if I were you, because we are about to talk
about Fuji cameras.
And Mr. Amell, you in many ways,
too much of the internet, too much of the world.
You're an introduction to a lot of the science
and a sort of an understanding for how Fuji cameras work
and what makes them special.
Oh, yeah.
Wow, that's perfect.
Bring the Fuji.
Sure, I bring the Fuji.
So I guess to start here, in terms of a Fuji image,
why are so many people gravitating to it?
Why are Fuji cameras becoming this sort of viral phenomena?
What is it about these cameras has enabled them to kind of like leak into the social fabric?
Tick tock.
No, not just tick tock.
That's why I bought mine.
No, and you.
Oh, it was trendy.
I think I know.
It's true.
It was kind of trendy.
Yeah, it was popping up.
Okay, but it was trending not necessarily because okay. There's a lot of things
A lot of the answers to a lot of the questions you were asking me
The answer is the democratization of something, you know
when we're like we're moot creators are picking up this brand because
This brand has finally brought this feature that used to be on these inaccessible thing to an accessible. Okay, right? So
Fuji film democratized color because it takes a very long time
to get really good at doing good color.
In 2016 or 2017 or so, I bought my first Fuji camera.
It was a Fujifilm X-T2.
It was my first camera at all.
I didn't knew nothing about what I was doing at all.
I started making videos and everyone on YouTube was like,
oh, what's your color workflow?
And there's all these videos talking about like,
oh, how I grade, how I grade.
And I was just like, Astia.
By the way, Astia is a film stock.
Fujifilm, if you do not know,
they have all these film stocks
that you can choose to shoot with.
They are color profiles on the camera.
You do not only have to shoot with them in JPEG,
you can also apply them to video.
And so I literally was not color grading at all.
I was just choosing the one
that fit what I was shooting the best.
Yeah, so we talked with this creator named Colt Kirwin,
who is like, I don't know if you guys have seen his stuff.
His videos are just like so charming and fun.
And we asked him about Fuji and he said like,
But yeah, instead of competing with the big camera brands,
Fuji has had a different experience where
your JPEGs magically look really good and
you can kind of customize within camera versus throwing it into Lightroom and having to do
that already.
So I feel like Fuji has really gotten a cult following in the past couple years because
of their specific film emulations in that, oh, you don't have to shoot RAW anymore, I
just shoot JPEG, blah, blah, blah.
And it's nice.
I think it's a breath of fresh air
when everything is competing on the technicalities.
It's like, okay, we don't have to be perfect.
Let's just make something fun to use, yeah.
And that keyword, fun, came up over and over and over again
when we talked to people.
So Fuji's the nothing phone of camera brands.
I think nothing is more utilitarian.
Really?
Because I would buy my mom a nothing phone.
A Moto Razr.
I think, so, okay, that's fair.
Yeah, I guess the fun aspect of like,
we're not gonna have the craziest specs,
but when you use it, you will feel things.
Yeah.
So, Brandon, who is like the chief cinematographer
at LTT resume, he said like,
Fuji is probably the most fun in terms of all the brands.
Because if you've never owned a camera before
and you're just starting out,
I think that they allow it,
that the tactile feeling of the lens
is the way that the cameras are built,
the button placement, the shutter angle,
the way that dials are used on the cameras.
It's all very well thought out.
And especially if I think back to myself as a beginner,
that used to be kind of the appeal of Canon,
is Canon was very approachable
and it wasn't super difficult.
You don't have to think about a lot of stuff.
You can just start learning.
And that's the thing too,
is I find that what Fuji picked up that idea from Canon
is that they pushed it further by saying,
well, let's not just make it easy and accessible,
let's make it an experience that feels good.
So fun and colors popped up over and over again
in our interviews.
But if you want to buy a Fuji camera specifically
to make videos.
We talked to a creator named Joshua DeLau Victoria,
who does, he's a touring guitar player
and he'll shoot like guitar videos,
either teaching people guitar
or just like doing cool covers.
And he needed like a compact, simple, easy camera to shoot.
And then using the Fuji, I kind of fell in love with the photography side of it because
I mainly bought it for video.
And then I was like, oh, this thing also shoots awesome photos.
Of course, it made it made photography really fun in a way that I think other cameras don't.
I think that these are probably still still cameras.
There's an there's a whole era of this happening.
This may be around the same time.
So I remember also getting into still cameras
getting good at video.
Like Canon 5D kind of was the beginning
of a lot of these trends where,
oh snap, big sensor, shallow depth of field,
looks like movie.
I can make movie with still camera.
And if you put the right lenses on, a 5D and a 5D Mark II,
you can get this incredible, beautiful video.
And then I think around GH2 or GH3,
people started like hacking them
and putting the Magic Lantern software on them
and getting higher bit rates out of them
and doing the same sort of stuff with those cameras.
And there was this little mini era of,
this is actually a camera for photos,
but I can make videos that look pretty good with.
A big thing for me was I started doing more work for clients,
like photo stuff or video stuff for other people.
Because I guess I had somewhat of a distinct style
that other people kind of wanted.
So then I was starting to do some freelance stuff and I was having a lot of trouble with the the Fuji did not have any kind of
image stabilization and I didn't want to invest in like a huge rig or like I
don't like using gimbals I find them really annoying to use and the autofocus
in the Fuji was horrible. So at one period of time all of a sudden the
processor got fast enough the processors got fast enough,
the sensors got good enough readout speed,
where every camera could be a hybrid camera.
So with the person you talk to,
it is understandable that they would have switched off
of Fuji because Fuji still is geared
towards the photography workflow,
but I would argue, but I would argue,
that if you shoot manual for everything and you control everything you want that they're still very good for that
I think that makes a lot of because I think the big things that we heard for why people maybe don't like Fuji for video
are
Oftentimes there's a 30-minute record limit. That's not like a hard and fast rule
But oftentimes depending on which Fuji camera you're shooting on yeah that that used to be
but oftentimes depending on which Fuji camera you're shooting on.
Yeah, that used to be an import tax rule.
Because basically if it could record for over 30 minutes,
it was taxed as a video camera,
which is a much higher tax.
And it would have jacked the price of the camera
up by a ton, so most of the cameras.
That's why a lot of cameras from that day
had a 29 minute fixed time.
Exactly, it was very dumb.
That's ridiculous.
And then the other thing is like, that went away by the way.
Auto-focus isn't fantastic for Fuji cameras.
Like, there's a lot of stuff where like,
if you're run and gun,
you just have to like figure out
which settings would be good,
but if you really like stylistic color
and there's not a lot of like intense movement
in your videos, it's like, it's a real contender.
I would agree with that.
Also, just side note.
Yeah.
The Fuji XT series cameras, they use APS-C sensors,
which are smaller than full frame.
Yeah.
And then they also have this GFX series,
which is larger than full frame, it's medium format.
They never wanted to compete in full frame
because Canon, Sony, Nikon are all in this space.
So they were like, we can dominate the APS-C space,
we can dominate the medium format space.
So they never even competed with full frame,
which I think is another reason that people
didn't start using them for video either,
because people wanted that full frame experience for video.
Okay, so speaking of sensor size,
I wanna talk about Panasonic,
because even though Panasonic
does have full frame cameras right now, I talk about Panasonic because I, even though Panasonic does have full-frame cameras right now,
I largely associate Panasonic and their brand with,
they do a lot before everyone else.
They oftentimes don't get good credit for it.
Their color science is a little weird,
and they have micro four-thirds sensors which have,
I would argue more downsides than upsides,
but what are your initial impressions on Panasonic before we dive into
some of the conversations we had with creators?
I'm making smartphone analogies in my head.
They're like the one plus, like people who are
really, really into specific sets of specs
and things they want to get out of a camera
might like the Panasonic move.
So understand why some people will gravitate towards it,
but why they might not become a mainstream, huge option.
I also note, because they were micro four-thirds the sensor size will dictate what you can do on
the camera because you have to have so much data read out. Panasonic was the company that
brought a lot of features to the camera industry because they had the smallest sensor so it was
easier for them to move the data. They could add the features because they didn't have
to move as much data in order to allow things
like log recording and things like that.
So the way it always went was it was like,
oh we got five axis stabilization in Micro Four Thirds
and now it comes to APS-C and now it comes to full frame.
So yeah.
So I guess for those following along,
if you're still listening but you're also confused,
thank you so much.
Thank you.
This is not our normal waveform conversation.
Thank you so much.
Yeah.
No, no, no, but essentially like Panasonic
uses smaller sensors, right?
And that leads to on paper, more advancements.
Yes, yeah.
But a lot of their, I guess,
a lot of the reason that Panasonic has historically been able to be ahead of the game
is because they use smaller sensors.
Take a A series with computational photography.
Okay, so we were only able to find one creator
who regularly shoots on Panasonic.
His name is Stuart Hicks.
He's an architecture professor in Chicago
and he makes videos about architecture.
Shout out Chicago, greatest city on earth.
And.
What is it? New Jersey? Jersey Hoboken? No.
Top 10.
San Francisco.
LA is the best.
San Francisco.
Okay. All right. Well, delusion aside.
It's right there, guys.
So we asked him like, why do you shoot on Panasonic?
Your videos are gorgeous, but why did you do that?
So I still use the very first camera
that I ever purchased for doing this stuff,
and it's a Panasonic GH5 from the year 2020.
And he goes, you know, he still uses
the first camera he ever bought.
He bought the GH5 in 2020.
And he kind of immediately just went into things
he didn't like about it.
I mean, one question is,
are you going to be in a studio or out in the world?
I think that that makes a big difference.
In the studio here, for instance,
the autofocus doesn't matter.
I can set it and it doesn't become a problem. GH5 has notoriously the autofocus doesn't matter. I can set it and it doesn't become
a problem. GH5 has notoriously awful autofocus. It is unusable. You know, I made videos of
the... The way I learned that was I made a video where I used autofocus and I thought
it'd be fine because I was just sitting there and a viewer commented about how it was unwatchable
because of the focus breathing.
He's like, the GH5 has kind of notoriously awful autofocus.
He's frustrated with a lot of aspects of Micro Four Thirds.
And then he's like, you know, he'd love things
like shallower depth of field, stuff like that.
And so in addition to like the actual sort of
marketing advantage of Micro Four Thirds,
we also asked Tyler Stallman,
who's like this excellent camera creator.
So he's like, there are three basic reasons.
When we called him, his video was like gorgeous.
And we're like, what are you shooting this on,
bro?
And he's like, he's shooting on a GH7.
He was shooting on Panasonic.
Yeah.
And he said, there are three use cases that I
think Micro Four Thirds is, is actually the best
for, um, cause in many ways, you know, less depth
of field, less dynamic range, noise isn't as good,
but there are some things it does better at. One that we're looking into right now is we're quoting
on a client that we currently do their vertical social media, but we might want to do the same
campaigns in horizontal and a micro four thirds sensor is as close to square as you get. So if
you need to shoot for both formats at the same time,
there's really no better sensor. You get almost a square. So when you crop both,
they both look good and are not compromised. And a new firmware update actually lets you move
multiple markers around. So for me, I would say that I want to use the bottom 16 by 9 of the image for YouTube. And then I want to use the
center 9 by 16 for Instagram. And you can see those markers as you're shooting, which I think
is pretty amazing. And you can only do on something like the GH7. This is usually like referred to as
like open gate, open gate shooting. What's open gate? Generally, you have you have a sensor and you project the light over the sensor and
generally, you're not using the whole sensor because
Displays are usually 16 by 9 2 by 1 whatever when you're recording on that sensor
You're only recording a certain amount of it open gate recording
Just like the throughput thing that we were just talking about with micro four-thirds where they advance faster than other companies is
Where you use the entire sensor
and you re-out the four sensor,
which is normally a four by three aspect ratio.
Reason number two that Tyler said Micro Four Thirds
could be useful is as an overhead camera,
like just like a simple top down,
because Micro Four Thirds, traditionally,
you're not gonna get a super shallow depth of field,
so it's just clutch so you can get like everything in focus.
Smaller sensor, more in focus.
Yeah, exactly.
And then the third reason is because it's a smaller sensor
so generally stabilization is better.
Yeah, totally.
Smaller, lighter body, totally.
Also really cool bonus that 99% of people
wouldn't care about but people would yell at us
if we didn't mention.
Perfect.
Tyler was using ARRI colors on his Panasonic camera
because Panasonic has, I guess, an agreement with ARRI
to optimize ARRI color science for Panasonic.
So if you wanted to shoot ARRI
and get a bit of an ARRI look.
I did not know that.
We just find a really, really, really open wide aperture
lens plus ARRI color science.
And then we rent an RE camera and we get to do a photo shoot of you holding it.
Interesting.
I wonder how much of that is similar
to the red color science on the NRA
because when I applied those lets,
they did not really look like red.
They're very nice.
Tyler spoke pretty highly.
I know Ellis has mentioned like a production company as well
that loves shooting on Panasonic
and has shot these excellent shorts.
Stuffin' in here.
No, they're a really cool YouTube video
called Media Division that does
really, really, really intense camera stuff.
And their whole thing is, if you wanna buy a cinema camera,
just buy a GH6 or a GH7 or whatever the most reason was.
Yeah, just use the ARRI color.
Yeah, they're just like, there's no, yeah.
But that's them.
Super interesting.
Stop it!
Also, I mean, it can often be easier to adapt more lenses
as well to smaller sensors because you can more easily
cover the sensor.
You can't adapt a Micro Four Thirds sensor to a full frame, a Micro Four Thirds lens
to a full frame camera.
Yeah.
All right guys, we have one more brand
before we get to our break.
Yeah, I noticed the elephant in the room.
Well, with two more moving over your shoulder.
We're missing two, yeah.
So we're gonna do one more, then do a break.
That was the elephant for all the audio listeners.
Okay.
Okay.
We technically didn't do Canon yet either. Okay, so we're on, so I wanna talk about them. And all the audio listeners. Okay. That's good. Okay. We technically didn't do Canon yet either.
Okay, so we're on, so I wanna talk about Canon.
Okay.
So Peter McCannon.
Nice.
Whoa.
That works way too well.
I just made that up.
We could end the video here.
Okay.
We can hear that Red Bull slur.
That was crazy.
Okay.
When people talk about Canon cameras,
they talk about it like with this insane nostalgia.
Like, oh, I couldn't, like, oh, I loved them.
Like when, like, so we had Casey Neistat come in
because when I think about a creator who shoots on Canon,
I still think of Casey Neistat.
That daily vlog, the 300 day sprint insane thing,
that was all Canon.
And so when we asked Casey to come in
and just tell us about the cameras he used.
There was a camera called the Canon,
I cannot believe I can't remember the name of this camera.
The HBO show Catfish, you know that show?
Like, be careful who you date.
That show was predicated by a documentary called Catfish
that my friends made and
Most of the documentary catfish that was that like Sunday its film festival MTV bought it put it in 2000 movie theaters
That movie was shot primarily on t1 t1. Are you looking it up right now?
T
No, no is a vertical form factor. It was way before that
try cannon t1 T No, no is a vertical form factor. It was way before that try
Canon t1 t
Yes, and it was like the first kind of point-and-shoot that was really optimized for video not for stills
No, no, no, no, no, no a beautiful
Where's my phone?
Right now if you're watching this at home everybody in this room is on their phones trying to figure out the name of this camera It's a stunning camera. Go to eBay and try and buy it if you can find one
Not even... is that beautiful?
What's the name of the Canon?
Camera that was like all stainless steel is really small. It, it's the one Rell Film Catfish on,
like the flip outside.
That's it, that's it.
What's the name of that Mark test?
TX1.
TX1, Van Nysatnewit, thanks Van.
Yeah, I still have mine.
Me too, I have two, but.
The Canon TX1.
First of all, like that was like a,
that was a very fun experience getting to talk to him.
I think as a youth in this space,
it's very cool being able to go and interview Casey.
Felt like a career moment for me.
I don't think he knows my name.
That's cool, my name is Rich.
My name is Earl.
But yeah, but so many people would wax poetic
about Canon in the past. we asked Colt Kirwin
Who's like my gen Z Casey Neistat?
he said like the way I see it was Canon had a
Choke hold on the market if you want to be a real photographer you get a Canon camera, right?
and there's still that that boat and then
Sony kind of like from the they were in the DSLR boat and then Sony kind of like from the they were in
the DSLR world and then Sony kind of took that leap to do mirrorless cameras
and in the beginning like Sony's color science is not good or the battery life
sucks stick with Canon and then I feel like now the mirrorless market has taken
over everything so that's where Sony has kind of like quote
unquote failed I guess and then continued to iterate until they perfected it.
Similar to Nikon they released their first mirrorless camera like the same
time Nikon did like it took them a really long time but they had a very
strong stronghold, this strong squared hold on the like prosumer DSLR market.
Right.
Right, they had the 1DX camera, which was like insane.
Canon, the reason they're good for like Casey Neistat
is because their autofocus has traditionally been
the best, like some of the best in the entire industry.
It has changed a little bit more recently,
but up until recently, like they had the best autofocus of the industry
by far.
It's also color science.
I find the advantages of the Canon in terms of color
are more at the entry level.
Like if you don't want to touch it, it's just going
to give you something pleasing right away.
No effort.
Once you take it a step deeper, like for professionals,
I don't actually think it matters.
I think you, a Sony and a Canon and a Lumix and a for it. Once you take it a step deeper, like for professionals, I don't actually think it matters.
I think you, a Sony and a Canon and a Lumix and
a, even, you know, even where Fuji is right now,
like everything that has a modern log profile can
be matched, which wasn't the case a few years ago.
We talked with a creator named Inga who's a food
creator and she just like makes these great food videos and wants to focus on
The food and she said that someone in the comments described her videos as like a Rembrandt painting
A lot of like why I do what I do is I want people to have like a better relationship with food
I want them to like be introduced to cooking in a way that doesn't feel like
Burdensome and so I think the lighting I use kind of want to translate to that like not just like like of course
I want it to feel warm, I want it to feel comfortable.
But I also want it to feel like it's not something that's overly produced in the sense of like,
oh, we're in a studio and like, we're going to bang through all these recipes, and more
just like, this could be an average day in your life too.
So that kind of translates a little bit to that.
But I also think like recently, there was a comment that said the color was a little
But like Rembrandt style, I think of my lighting because because wintertime it's darker now
Um, so my natural lighting is a little darker overall
But I think it kind of played into it a little bit which I kind of also like but you know
I I think it just fits sort of the homey vibes overall. I guess the soft
It's always like a little bit warm with like
silly ray shadows and it's kind of this like
dreamy warm tone thing.
Canon is very, very often used in the wedding industry
for that reason.
Because you don't have to do as much editing
if you're just like editing some JPEGs
because it has very warm natural skin tones.
For the next bonus up,
I'll get married if this video hits 200K views and then I'll do my bonus episode there
shot on Canon.
Nice, does your girlfriend know about this?
What girlfriend, David?
It is fascinating.
We're getting married, David.
I will say it is fascinating to see the reasons,
the very, very specific reasons that certain cameras
and brands get selected for certain applications. That is like, okay, the wedding industry, the warmth, very specific reasons that certain cameras and brands get selected for certain applications.
That is like, okay, the wedding industry,
the warmth, the friendliness,
okay, Canon color works for that.
I have my own reason actually for red too,
which I've told the story before,
but skin tones, specifically darker skin tones
with red color science, not even close.
No one else is close.
And I think there's's a bunch of other reasons
like people might choose Sony Blackmagic RE
for specific color reasons for whatever projects there are
and it's always fun hearing those.
The whole like, oh I buy this camera for color thing,
the more we looked into it, we asked Tyler about this
and he was like, dude, once you have 10-bit color,
it doesn't matter and if you're buying a Blackmagic,
yeah, I suppose it does.
But yeah.
No one wants to go in and drop a load
on all their color, right?
Yeah.
All right, so we've gone through all of these brands,
but there's an issue.
There is one camera brand that absolutely ran away with it.
One third of the creators we spoke to
either were shooting with this camera,
switched to this camera,
or were considering switching to this camera brand,
including Casey Neistat, Austin Evans, and so many others.
So after the...
Yeah.
So after the...
Me.
Hey.
After the break, what is the camera brand that every creator seems to wanna switch to
and is it overhyped?
It's Sony.
It's not overhyped.
It's Sony.
We love Sony. We love Sony.
There's a lot of reasons.
I'm totally game to do the next one.
I know, I'm all about it.
I know, I'm all about it.
That's true.
Bingo.
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All right guys, Sony.
We gotta talk about Sony.
Yeah.
Wait, could we do it where everyone at the table
just says Sony really quickly?
Sony. Just like.
Sony. Yeah.
All right, ready?
Sony. All right guys, Sony.
Sony. Sony.
Sony. Sony.
Sony. Sony. Sony Sony Sony Sony we love Sony
You know how many say a word too many times is that something?
Yeah, that's me now so okay creators me
I have to find a different conjunction.
Hey, there we go. Creators love this camera.
Just to list off a few of the creators that we've seen
and haven't seen who use it, we talked to Shua Films.
He's the co-founder of this like magazine studio
in Chicago and he also has his own channel called,
the magazine studio called Powder Blue,
his channel's called Shua Films.
You know, when I started vlogging,
the main person that got me into it was,
of course, Casey Neistat, I think a lot of us.
For me personally, when the Sony 7 IV came out,
it was kind of the perfect camera for me at the time
because it was a nice hybrid of photo and video.
And just like the aut because it was a nice hybrid of photo and video and just like the
autofocus was always trustworthy when it came to to Sony's especially like the recent years.
Brittany who's this DP who we talked to about Blackmagic she switched from Blackmagic for her
YouTube videos to the Sony FX3. I'm always recommending some kind of Sony camera you know
because it's just it is easy so I just think it so versatile. I use it for client work all the time
because people, even clients know about the Sony ecosystem.
So that is also a go-to camera for them.
So it's just one of the most versatile cameras
I've ever used and I've pretty much used
every brand possible.
Clients know Sony has a rep
and so they actually feel more confident seeing
that's funny.
Like people with that brand.
That's true about red in the past
yeah yeah we asked colt and he said so i feel like the a7s3 came out and kind of changed the game for
everybody this is everything you could have ever needed you know we had great battery life and the
color science was now 10-bit color so now you can actually color grade it and stuff, and yeah, like the dual native ISO that it has,
allowing it to basically shoot, I mean,
it sees better than we can see, you know?
That really made it so versatile to where you weren't
kind of like subject to, oh, you know, like,
the sun went down, so we can't really shoot anymore,
but now you can shoot whenever, there's no more excuses.
We asked Austin about this, and like, I I mean he switched from red to a full Sony stack
He said like X3 we shoot entirely on Sony FX 3 FX 30 a 7s 3
There's no complaints. I have like I just like when our a 7s 3s die. Where's goodbye another one
I just there's nothing else that we need and maybe there's a an FX 4 or an a 7s 4 or whatever and you know
They bring out 4k 1000 or something cool
whatever, but like it just it has completely changed the way that we shoot videos and
It's crazy to think that it's been five years and this camera still feels like it's absolutely badass
And then we asked Casey about it and he cited a few key features for that like he just loved it was smaller
It was lighter. It felt tougher had I think the magnesium body or a metal body instead of a plastic body like the t2 series
But most importantly, you know lens that fit around that had a hot shoe on the top
So those two were never in competition with one another and it had the touch the screen to focus
Which was a gigantic leap for me
there's a lot of shots where I'm talking to camera and
Without my arm entering frame. I tap behind me and it rack focuses to whatever I'm talking about
And I would often also sort of point to what I'm talking about and I'm able to frame that in real time
With my sunglasses without breaking out time to act with the lens
Rack the focus and then frame my finger pointing at something in the background
Which is a super dynamic shot and I was able to do it by like tapping the screen once
and filming by myself with no assistance.
And I think like Sony was the first camera
that enabled me to work with like that level of precision.
That's like all people who use it.
We also talked to like Stuart.
He said that he shot one shot in a video on the Sony FX3
and he shared it to somebody and they were like,
what was that specific shot?
He saw the FX6 shot without knowing,
and he was like, wow, that is gorgeous.
How did you guys get that?
I was like, oh man, the fact that you could point that out
without knowing that it changed cameras like that,
that hurts a little bit.
So I think that prompted me to think,
oh well, you know, this is kind of important. The rest of the video is Panasonic, and someone was like, oh, I think that prompted me to think, oh, well, you know, this is kind of important.
The rest of the video is Panasonic,
and someone was like, oh, I like that.
Like, people are like gravitating to the image
of Sony cameras.
Sony is-
Which is a newer thing, to be fair.
It's super new.
Okay, what happened?
You really wanna know what happened?
Yeah, let's hear it.
Sony got good?
I mean, I remember thinking about switching to
and using more Sony in the early mirrorless camera days
for them.
This was a7, a7S, the first ones,
which were like super good.
This was instead of like your C100 or?
No, this was like, I, so I shoot red
and then I have like sort of smaller crash cam
and stuff for like R5 basically.
And you know, the built-in mics for Sony's a7 series So I shoot red and then I have like sort of smaller crash cam and stuff for like R5 basically.
And you know the built in mics for Sony's A7 series are good and the color science is
way less magenta and way more usable and maybe even matchable to the red stuff and I was
starting to get like oh maybe I'll shoot more Sony stuff.
And even to this day, on and off, we roster some Sony cameras, we don't shoot with them
very much but they're very useful
But rich yeah, you want like we want to switch it. Yeah, wait
Give marquez the pitch right now look when we're at South by Southwest and we were you know in the audience
I would have died to get some FX6. Yeah for the dual native ISO
it was very dark in there very challenging situation and
Our c70s and our 5s could not handle
the dark environments.
Yeah, this is fair.
The less control you have over the environment,
the more Sony makes sense
because it just makes so much of the process.
Not, thoughtless isn't the right way to put it,
but just like, you just,
the last thing you think about is the camera itself.
Yeah.
So Sony's are kind of computers with lenses attached to them.
They were very early moving to the mirrorless camera game.
And that gave them a leg up in the many years that followed.
Something that's really good about Sony's mirrorless cameras
have a shorter flange distance than non-mirrorless cameras.
And a flange distance is the distance between the lens mount
and the actual sensor itself.
This allows you to adapt basically any lens you want to it
that covers the full frame sensor.
Because of that, a lot of people that shoot Sony
will often be able to use vintage lenses
or all these dreamy lenses or all these different things.
And that's the E-mount, right?
And that's why everyone loves E-mount.
That's why everyone loves E-mount.
You also had five axis stabilization.
Newer Sony cameras, like you said, had dual native ISO.
Native ISO.
ISO is basically electronic gain
where you're taking the image on the sensor
and you're amplifying that image.
There are noise pixels and there are clean pixels.
If you're amplifying the ISO,
you're also amplifying the noise.
So it makes it a lot easier to see. If you're amplifying the ISO, you're also amplifying the noise, so it makes it a lot easier
to see. If you have dual native ISO, the native ISO is the cleanest the sensor can be. So once you
hit that native ISO, you're back to a very low. Yeah, Sony cameras, very famous for being able to
basically see in the dark because they have a low native ISO and a high native ISO. For the easiest
experience to get a high quality video, it's really tough not recommending the Sony A7S III.
The low light and stabilization alone
just make it so versatile that it's kind of
the perfect camera for YouTube.
But over the past few years,
Sony hasn't just cemented its cameras as great options,
but its entire ecosystem.
Their ecosystem is completely compatible
from the cheapest, like the color science on the FX3,
the same on a Venice.
Because the sensor is exactly the same as the A7S30.
The E-mount is completely ubiquitous.
So it's one of those things where it's like,
if my dream is to be a cinematographer on a set one day,
and if I go and I buy an FX30, like an APS-C cinema camera,
I could use that glass one day when I upgrade to a Venice
or I could use that footage on a shoot with a Venice
as just like a simple B-cam.
You know what I mean?
And so it just becomes this like insane,
like it's just kind of a no brainer
if you have to buy one camera.
But that's also what gave me like massive existential dread
about this video, because I was like,
are we really gonna make an hour long video
about what camera you should get in?
And I was like, oh my gosh,
we're just gonna talk about Sony.
Like, it freaked me out.
I don't know, there's a lot of different reasons,
but they did sort of build out an ecosystem.
Their ecosystem is amazing.
Because again, they have the A7S III and the FX3,
and then the FX30 if you don't wanna spend
as much money for the FX3. And the FX30 if you don't wanna spend as much money for the FX3.
And the FX line is like similar to what Marques was saying
with the red being basically a brain.
You build stuff around it.
If you need that, you get that.
If you don't need that, you get the A7S III.
Like they have so many options.
I will admit I am definitely behind
on my appreciation of Sony as an ecosystem and as an image
because most of my experience with shooting Sony,
I have an A7R, I think I've shot most of my video stuff
with A7R III and I have an A1.
So I have not shot FX series ever.
So that's obviously a huge gap.
And I think just menu system stuff,
little things like about the colors
that come out of that camera
and me trying to match it with the red is probably unfair.
It's not ever gonna quite match.
But how versatile the entire lineup is and how many different options they have across the board to just have a camera for whatever
situation we need to get an image from is
admirable in a way that makes me want to give another shot. And when they release the new sensor that went in the A7S3 and the
other one. It's A7S III and FX III.
FX, that sensor is way better
than the old sensor used to be just in terms of color.
Because Sony sensors used to be like ubiquitous with-
I used to be able to- Purple, magenta color.
I could watch a YouTube video, a vlog,
and a clip on YouTube and I'd be like, ugh, Sony.
Without anyone saying anything, I'd be like, ugh.
You could say the same thing about Panasonic. You could say the same thing about Panasonic.
You could say the same thing about a lot of different
cameras.
I kind of felt that about that, about Blackmagic,
at least back in the day.
I could see Canon and basically identify it
right off the bat.
And then, yeah, there was a little bit of red
sprinkled in there and I'd be like, oh, my people.
So, yeah, I still feel like I have that pretty dialed,
but there's a lot of Sony development
that's happened since then.
Yeah, when we talked to Becca,
something that she brought up that was really interesting
is how Sony invests in creators.
That is also a massive player here.
She was like, I went to this Sony event
and in her words, it was poppin'.
People were there, you know what I mean?
Yeah, there's this little ecosystem,
and Casey switched to, there's all this clout ecosystem,
in addition to the fact that these are good cameras.
Sony hosts these camps, and these projects
that people can go all the work on together.
Multiple times a year.
And they invite creators from various different levels
of subscribers.
They do this for the same reason that Google makes Chromebooks.
Chromebooks are not made to be sold to regular people.
They're made to be put in elementary schools
and get kids used to Google services
So when they grow up they keep using the Google ecosystem
And so if you're a if you're a camera user, especially because the ecosystem of a camera is glass, which is extremely expensive
Accessories of which Sony makes ones that only work on the Shoni hot shoes
Yeah
If you're investing in this ecosystem, you're way less likely to just sell everything
and move out of it.
So doing this outreach is very smart,
not just because you will make a sale now,
because you're most likely to make many sales in the future.
Marquez, in our interview, asked me,
do you have a dream camera to shoot on?
And I was like, I don't know.
I have a dream camera.
An FX6, I kind of shrugged. Because I was one of those kids I was like, I don't know. I have to do an exam run. Well, in FX6, I kind of shrugged
because I was one of those kids who just like,
I got an A6300, I was on E-mount,
I understood the menu system and I was just like,
yeah, I guess I just keep shooting Sony.
But I've come to really like shooting on Canon,
which is what we do on the Studio Channel.
But yeah, no, I can attest to it.
They, it worked, they got me hooked as a youth. But I think, I walked away with a little bit of dread here
for a couple reasons.
For the video itself, I was like,
I don't like this as an ending.
I don't wanna make a video where I'm just like,
well, everyone else shoots Sony, so you should too.
It just didn't, usually we'd scrap this video,
but to be honest with you,
I introduced myself to a lot of these creators
who I really liked through this video,
and I was really scared that like,
I was gonna embarrass myself in front of these people
that I'd spent a long time trying to build a career
where I could feel confident talking with them.
And I think it was also just like,
I don't know if I like the idea of the internet
just increasingly looking just like Sony cameras.
Like there is something existentially scary
and maybe even monotonous about the idea of like,
well, you just buy a Sony camera if you wanna be
like the modern filmmaker YouTube stack.
It was kind of depressing to me.
Yeah, I think we all root for competition in general.
And so since we know that mirrorless cameras are this wave
and Sony is at the crest of this wave,
it kind of feels like Sony is the only thing
anyone can be using.
But I think everyone is on their way catching up,
adding features, making new cameras.
And there will be another wave in the future
and it'll be like, oh my God,
everyone uses Nikon now or Nikon now.
I think there'll be more waves in the future.
But at the same time,
it's way less regional than smartphones. I think if Sony be more waves in the future. But at the same time, it's way less regional than smartphones.
I think if Sony is dominating in cameras
where everyone has free choice,
that must just mean they're making really good cameras.
And I got no problem with shouting out quality of product.
Like they're actually making the best stuff.
Okay, fine, they're making the best stuff.
So we had one more conversation with the creator
that I think kind of changed my perspective
on the whole like what is the best camera
because like the whole take of,
oh the best gear is the one that you have.
David has a take on this.
The best camera is the one you have.
I don't think that that's true,
but I also don't think that you should just buy a Sony camera.
So we talked with the creator who didn't buy a camera at all.
He's a part of a team that grew their channel
to over a million subscribers.
Using just smartphones?
Using just iPhone 13s.
Wow.
No, iPhone 14s, I apologize.
That's awesome.
So after the break, this conversation with this creator
and what it says about making the right camera choice.
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So after hours of interviews, Rich and I are staring at the timeline for this video and
we're getting nervous because figuring out where the story is, it's getting harder and
harder.
Yeah, at this point we had looked at every popular camera brand and their ecosystem and
it felt like the answer was just buy a Sony or that every camera brand is great and to not worry about your gear.
Neither of those answers feel like they're satisfying or that they'll genuinely help you find the right camera for your videos.
So out of a bit of desperation in our interview with Casey, I just straight up look at him and I go, Casey, gear still matters, right?
I reject the supposition that it's important to understand gear and have gear. I reject it wholly.
Yeah, I mean, I've become much more of a sort of like anti-gear purist. Like I think when someone
says, I love that video you made, it's a beautiful compliment. It makes you feel warm on the inside.
When they say, what did you shoot it on?
It is the greatest insult you could ever say to someone.
It's insulting.
And I take it personally.
So, you know, especially when talking to newer creators,
newer filmmakers, my line is always,
the gear doesn't matter.
And by de-emphasizing the gear,
what it does is it puts the focus back on what you uniquely bring to storytelling.
And I think right now, like, we're at the most sort of virtuous place in that technology cycle,
which is that almost every camera out there, almost every phone out there gives you a look,
gives you an aesthetic that is way above the line of good enough to do something great with.
Casey talks about how we saw our S25 Ultra video.
And it's kind of ironic that this is a video
about how the tech and the changes in the tech
are kind of minimal and small.
And the way that, I guess, do you want to describe
how you differentiated that video?
I started by doing this really cinematic intro
where I turned around and was in an allegory
where I went from the outside to the inside
by going and turning around and cutting through
the background and moving to the inside of the set.
It was a fun cinematic piece that sort of started
the story arc of the video.
And in Casey's words, he goes,
that one storytelling device was far more interesting to me
than the last 20 gear upgrades that we had at a studio.
And Marques promptly asked him to leave.
Yep.
That is a joke.
They get along very well.
They're both very famous.
That kind of speaks to why I think
on like a philosophical level Sony catches on
because Sony is all about enabling people
to think about the context of the story
and what's on screen and stop thinking about the camera.
So you can constantly ask yourself like,
what do I want to depict or what's the story I want
or what's the context I wanna be in?
And like, I can trust that this camera will capture that
and to an even more sort of extreme extent.
We talked with Adam who's a cohost on this YouTube We talked with Adam, who's a cohost
on this YouTube channel called Jetlag.
He's a cohost on this YouTube channel called Jetlag.
Have you guys heard of Jetlag?
Have you seen this show?
I've heard of it.
Guys, this channel is so cool.
So it's a travel game show, like-
The Amazing Race.
Like The Amazing Race, but the whole point of the show
is like the chaos factors
10 times more than any other reality TV show
we've ever seen before.
Like in The Amazing Race,
somebody might end up in the wrong part of town,
but you're never gonna end up in the wrong country.
And we wanted to make a show where like,
maybe you end up in the wrong country.
The only way that they could make that show
is by just shooting iPhone stock iPhone app,
no color grading, nothing. Because they're chewing through tons of footage. So they need
like a simple post workflow and manageable files. This got me thinking about, um,
shooting on iPhone in general. We asked Tyler about it.
I think if you're just getting started out and you, you know, maybe you're not even sure if
you're going to stick to filmmaking. If you pick up at least an
iPhone 15 Pro, that's when Apple log was introduced, you can take that as far as you want. You can make
it look as good as those other cameras and learn all the most important lessons of filmmaking with
just an iPhone. Don't add any more than you need. The most essential things are a wireless mic, which both Rode and GGI make great tiny ones
right now. And then an iPhone clamp, I designed
one called the Stalman clamp that what's
important to me, like whatever clamp you choose,
the most important part is that it is rock solid.
So like when you press record, it doesn't vibrate
your phone. If you're doing something like
transitions, you don't want the phone to like
move in between.
So looking for some kind of tripod clamp that is never going to change the shot when you're
operating the camera.
I get so many questions about people asking me like, oh, should I buy this $3,000 guitar?
And it's like, no, it's not going to make you better.
Whatever you have, just practice on it. The storytelling is always going to be more important than the video quality,
and that's actually where a lot of people that are just starting to get into making videos sort
of like lose track. Yes, a thousand percent. Because it's really easy to just look at YouTube
and get obsessed with the gear. Oh, yeah. I think there are a lot of people who watch a YouTube video
from a YouTuber who's been doing it a long time
and sees fancy editing or cinematography
or camera work or something and goes,
I wanna make YouTube videos.
What gear do I have to buy to be able to do that?
And it's not about that.
Like the video process and the I want to make videos thing
is all of the pre-work, the writing, the storyline,
that stuff, and getting people to care about that thing.
And then if you have more time,
or if you're making an amazing video,
then you can focus on the other stuff, build it up instead.
But yeah, I think people get distracted by the gear
and trying to make a good video gear. Yeah.
So I think Adam had this really cool analogy.
Do you guys know the show like Candid Camera?
Yeah.
You guys know the show?
Surprise.
Like Candid Camera.
Yeah, like OG.
Really old.
So the thing, the Candid Camera
was originally Candid Microphone.
It was an audio show.
And it existed because mics got small enough
where people couldn't see the microphone
and that technological innovation enabled that new format
and that new creative format.
Candid camera, same thing.
Camera got small enough
where people would be candid on camera.
And so it actually changed the contents of the story.
And so Adam was like,
that's kind of how he thinks about Jet Lab.
We've done other projects since where we did use
real cameras and lighting setups and stuff.
And I think it really opened our eyes to like,
thank God we filmed the show the way we do
because you could not make our show
if we tried to film it a different way, frankly.
The fact that you can make something on iPhones
is an invitation for people to think, what
can I make now with an iPhone that I couldn't have made before when iPhones weren't this
good?
And I think that if you can come up with a compelling answer to that question, you'll
have a format, you'll have something that is new and interesting and that actually takes advantage of this
as opposed to just making the same thing but lazier
because you don't have to put in the work
of setting up a better camera.
You shoot on red because your whole thing is MKBHD
and that's a part of your ethos
and it amplifies a part of who you are.
Every day we put clothes clothes on to like feel
ourselves right and sometimes when we wear a certain jacket it makes us feel like more powerful
or better and I think you can translate that to cameras like sometimes when we hold a camera it
makes us feel like a professional it gives us confidence. Does the camera bring joy like does
it does it is it going to enrich your life is Is it gonna make you inspired to do the best work
of your entire life?
Famously, Mr. Beast does not shoot 4K, right?
Is this still the case?
He shoots all Sony, all, I don't know if it's not 4K,
but he does kind of just put any camera in your hands,
and as long as he has coverage,
that's the only thing I care about.
It used to at least be the case that he didn't shoot 4K,
because he wanted to give you
that sort of home video kind of vibe.
Yeah, this actually happened.
You want the camera to be above a floor
where it's not hindering your story
or your video production.
480p.
And in Jimmy's case, it's funny,
he also wants it to be below a certain ceiling
so he's not distracting.
Exactly.
Yeah, so I think my big takeaway
is that gear is a multiplier
All it does is it makes what's great about you greater, but if you don't know what that is
You can't multiply anything by zero. Yes
Damn, that's our bar
So if you like this behind the scenes video
I'm sure you'll love all the behind the scenes
videos and ensemble videos that we do on the studio channel all the time.
And with that, I would like to say I think the real best camera you can get is the friends
we made along the way.
So gentlemen, do you feel like you learned something?
I do.
I love the multiplier.
I think that's a great bow tie on it.
Like gear is exciting and interesting to us
because we're kinda nerds.
And that's where we live on high form.
We're in the weeds and we love the gear and what it unlocks.
But it only unlocks the multiple of the thing
that you're trying to make.
You gotta have the idea.
Yeah, you gotta have the seed.
If you're just watering dirt,
doesn't matter how great that watering can is, you need a great seed so rich you come up with an analogy oh no
it's like percent of my diet and the conclusion is the best camera is the
camera in your pocket no it's not the best camera no I would say the best camera. Is it possible? That should be our answer.
I would say the best camera is the camera that does the thing that you want to do to
tell your story.
Yeah.
F*** that.
The best camera is the Popsipod A2D.
It's a V-Raptor XL.
It's clearly a V-Raptor XL.
That is the best thing.