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Good effort! I have some suggestions for future videos, that may help bring in more comments/views going forward .The best stunts have clear goals, and stand out for bringing something unique to the table. Stunts where you bump and land straight back on the road or get some random spins typically don't stand out, because they aren't associated with interesting landmarks or new concepts. Spots are most interesting when they can only be done in a handful of locations, rather than being trivial to copy and paste all over the map. You don't get responses like "I LOVE how Interface used the Ferris wheel (random example) to do that amazing new method!" if the stunting zone is fairly nondescript and uses overly familiar techniques, so I'd suggest using more stand out landmarks on the map and experimenting with more unusual methods to find as many new spots as you can .The editing was generally tightly paced and focused with good clarity, which was nice! But the introduction was quite long and it was hard to see what was happening, so I started losing interest until the main part kicked in. I also think interspersing multiple stunts together often just reduces the impact of them all, rather than lifting them up together, which happened a couple of times here in my opinion, it's usually best to show one stunt at a time. Great editing is half the battle and I think you're on the right path - beginner stunts with elite editing (and vice versa) stands out a whole lot more than middling versions of both .Biggest thing of all: quality over quantity. I think you're right to make a bunch of videos when you're just starting out, because you need to experiment and get feedback to improve. But I think you're posting so many videos that people kinda know what to expect going in, which makes your videos feel like less of an event. If you posted less frequently, and used that time to improve the quality of your stunts in particular (because your editing is generally nice and clean already), I think that would do wonders for your videos! Keep going as long as you still enjoy stunting, and don't worry too much about validation from others! Suffice it to say that social butterflys don't usually end up frequenting stunting forums, so don't feel let down if people don't always reply to your videos; they probably just don't know how to give the right feedback, since they're used to watching stunters with vast years of experience. I honestly think you should try finding a group of new stunters to make friends and collaborate with, so you can come up together and have fun pushing each other forward; that's how most crews got started in the past, allowing their members to focus on landing their best stunts and collecting them together for one big video. That way, you wouldn't need to land roughly 20 great stunts yourself for a solo, you could focus on landing 4-5 high quality stunts instead, and if you had a group of 4-5+ people doing the same, you could pump out some really dope videos when paired with stylish editing .Hope this helps man .
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