Why I Don’t Edit My Entertainment Videos — And Why That Matters
![]()
If you’ve watched any of the cast interviews I share, you’ve probably noticed something: they’re raw. No slick edits, no flashy overlays, no dramatic music cues. Just the interview as it happened — start to finish.
And that’s entirely intentional.
Here’s the thing — I don’t pretend to have conducted these interviews. I’m not sitting across from the guest, asking the questions. I’m simply sharing the footage as it is, straight from the source, because I believe there’s value in seeing it exactly how it went down.
There’s a growing trend online, especially with entertainment content, where platforms take existing interviews, re-edit them, brand them, and make it seem like they were the ones who sat down with the cast. Suddenly, what was a genuine moment becomes just another chopped-up marketing reel — and the audience loses the context and the truth of the original interaction.
I don’t do that.
Instead, I keep the footage in its raw form, because I want to preserve the integrity of the moment. You’ll see the awkward pauses, the unscripted laughter, the parts that would normally get cut. But that’s the good stuff — the human stuff. The part that shows the real personalities behind the productions we all love.
More importantly, I do it to pull back the curtain on how media works. Mainstream outlets are constantly shaping how we see people and stories through editing. By presenting the interviews unedited, I’m inviting you to see things as they actually happened — not as they were polished to appear.
This isn’t about claiming credit. It’s about respecting the source and showing the truth. No spin. No illusions. Just real conversations, shared the way they were meant to be seen.
So while my videos may not look as slick as the rest, that’s by design. I’m not here to fake exclusivity — I’m here to offer authenticity.
Because sometimes, the most honest thing you can do is just hit play and let it roll.





























RSS – Posts