Every video I've seen ignores the seminars and demos that are the soul of the whole fair. The fair is so much more valuable that just the vendors but you would not know that from those videos on You Tube.
dave
While I agree with your complaint, as an amateur video maker, making videos of seminars are tough to do...especially if you want to keep the viewers watching. Most viewers these days won't watch 30-45 minutes of any seminar without some camera movement regardless of how well its presented. That's why when you see a professional ( TV ) seminar, there are usually 2-3 cameras from different angles showing the presenter. Those cameras are usually on tripods too. The editor will bounce from one camera to another during the editing process to break up the monotony. I've done that too.
I'm not against filming seminars, I want to expose some of the issues needed to get one put together. Here are a few other things to ponder:
For a great video, once you get those 1-2 cameras set up, you'll also need 1-2 tripods & a clear open place to set them up. If the speaker moves around, you'll need a cameraman on each of those cameras moving it left & right to keep up with the presenter. This presents a whole new set of challenges.
Things such as guns, accessories, a little blacksmith work, etc. are much easier to film for a fellow with 1 camera to keep a viewer interested in watching the entire video. I did that in the video posted of the Dixon Gunmakers Fair from 2018. I broke that video up showing barrel work at the forge, the barrel making machine in action, some of the guns, the cannon fire, interviews with gun builders, etc.
Another thought.....the cameraman probably has to get permission to use a camera during their seminars. I've run into that problem before. I had a woman at a show here in KY a few years ago **ABSOLUTELY** didn't want any of her tables filmed and shown on the internet and she let me know about it! That's no problem with me, I simply deleted all footage of her table. Some presenters doesn't want you using cameras during their time on stage or at gun shows.
I'm not against presenting seminars on video, I'm just exposing some of the problems amateur videographers run into getting that done. Keep on burning that powder my friends.
For those interested, here is the 2018 Gunmakers Show video I was talking about: