Who would be your audience? And this is a question I am asking myself?Kishkumen wrote: ↑Mon Aug 19, 2024 2:41 amThank you, Markk. That is extremely valuable. Yes, I am definitely not looking to be like Dehlin or RFM. I want to raise interest in aspects of Mormonism people may not have thought about before in short-form videos. The idea is to hit a neutral tone but one that seeks to pique interest of a nerdy or geeky kind. I want those Nevermos who are just curious about Mormons and Mormonism. I want ex-Mos who still find it interesting. I want LDS people who find I am covering something they didn’t know in a fair and sympathetic way.
I am not going to have the big guests or the glitzy production. I will definitely work on the production, and I will try to get guests whom I want to talk to, but I do not want to compete with Dehlin, RFM, Reel, etc. Honestly, I have no interest in being a journalistic watchdog who tries to hold the LDS Church to account, or who wants to show how it is untrue. Zero interest. Indeed, I want instead to show how interesting it is without investing in any form of advocacy one way or the other.
If you are going to to be "church neutral," who would that demographic be?
I had a interesting week. My oldest brother pasted away and I went to the east coast for his funeral. It was a great time to get with family and meet my brothers friends he had back in his world, 3000 miles away from mine.
I flew in with my little sister who like myself is a evangelical, but she, is far removed from our Mormon upbringing in the church, and does not have a clue about of the current events of Mormonism. My older sister flew in from Utah county and is about as TBM as one comes. My brother that passed away was LDS, and would consider himself a TBM, but was hardly so compared to my sister. My other brother is agnostic, maybe a deist, but completely closed to any conversation of our pioneer TBM upbringing or religion at all (Vietnam closed that door long ago). My nieces and nephews, of my brother that passed, are all over the gambit....and came to me because they really were not sure what Mormonism was about past the talking points. I'm the "pull my finger" uncle that they can talk to. They wanted to know why they could not dress by brother and what he was wearing and why....questions like that.
So I guess my point and question is, these might be your audience. When my niece told me she really did not believe the Mormon faith and asked questions....and I had maybe a half hour to try to explain my journey out that started 33 years ago, I had no chance to tell her or communicate the complexities of the faith. Impossible.
It seems like from what you are saying, your audience might be the chapel Mormon, or inactive member of record?
Thanks