Andrew was enthusiastic when he heard I’d made my first video using footage from a drone, so he wanted to watch it. After seeing the three-and-a-half-minute video, he was gushing about how cool it was. But he wanted to know how to make such a video himself.
“How do you do it?” he asked. “Do they just have a button and it flies around and decides what to shoot for itself? Is that music just added automatically?”
The questions were shockingly ignorant. I was offended. Just a little. He thought I just pushed a button? He thought the drone did the work? He didn’t think I struggled to make this? He thought it was easy?
Let me back up.
About six months ago, the real estate company where I work bought a drone for me to learn to use. It seemed as though it would be fun and we could use it for high-end property listings. I fooled around with it for a few weeks, but then I got busy doing other things. I hadn’t touched it for four months.

What is your measure of success? For me, meaning keeps changing
Creating work that I’m proud of gives me elusive feelings of joy
Intolerance isn’t just an American thing; it’s common to all humans
As world descends into madness, back away and guard your heart
Until you ask the right questions, you’ll never find missing answers
Law profs: the Constitution means whatever we say it means
Why does the mainstream ignore those whose predictions were right?