@@zanejacksondiscgolf I played a lot as a teen and early twenties and had a decent arm back then - I could throw 420+ on a good day. Then I stopped playing for about 8 years, just now getting back in to it and relearning some things. I’m not in as good of shape anymore and also had a minor shoulder injury a few years ago that limits ROM on my throwing arm, so distance has been my biggest drawback. After about 15 rounds over the past few months, I’m driving around 260-300 with fairway drivers and don’t really have the power for anything in the 12-15 speed range. It’s getting better, but I can’t get by on brute strength alone like I used to. Practice drills and small tweaks to my form have helped quite a bit
Ouch, if you’re using a monochannel mic to record please please please remember to set the audio track with it to mono so it’s not all in my right ear, it unfortunately makes the video unlistenable.
@@zanejacksondiscgolf good to hear (no pun intended). As much as it seems like a small thing, having good audio (getting a mic setup with minimal background noise, good levels in to avoid peaking, an okay EQ to touch up your voice a bit, and good output levels as well as attention to left and right channels) is probably one of the most important factors for a video doing well. At least, if you have bad audio, it almost doesn’t matter how good the content is lol. There are plenty of tutorials online for each of these things, they should only take a few minutes to learn what you need to have decent audio, but they are incredibly useful. Best of luck to you! Edit: unplugged my headphones so I could give a closer listen for some extra feedback, I’m a bit bored right now so why not. I can tell you have a nice voice to listen to, by the way. I would try seeing if you can safely clip your lapel mic lower on your shirt, perhaps at heart level. You might find you get a clearer voice sound (less muffling on the detail and better low tones) as well as less breath sound as you throw and stuff. Now, I can’t tell if there is a good wind guard on the mic right now, but you might find you run into more wind sound when you no longer have your beard acting as a blocker 😂. I also think some light EQ could also help bring out your voice better and make it sound great. There should be plenty of short vids on EQing voice for YT vids on different software, many editing programs will have a feature built in for it. Overall I liked the content here and your presentation, your manner of speaking, the filming with a drone to show the flights better, the editing was clean. I think you can definitely go pretty far.
Bro throws his putter farther than I can throw my best driver 😂
How long have you been playing?
@@zanejacksondiscgolf
I played a lot as a teen and early twenties and had a decent arm back then - I could throw 420+ on a good day. Then I stopped playing for about 8 years, just now getting back in to it and relearning some things. I’m not in as good of shape anymore and also had a minor shoulder injury a few years ago that limits ROM on my throwing arm, so distance has been my biggest drawback.
After about 15 rounds over the past few months, I’m driving around 260-300 with fairway drivers and don’t really have the power for anything in the 12-15 speed range. It’s getting better, but I can’t get by on brute strength alone like I used to. Practice drills and small tweaks to my form have helped quite a bit
Foot fault!
Second!
umm, where's the audio?
No audio for you? Not sure what happened there. There is audio on my end, but apparently I need to make some audio adjustments moving forward
Ouch, if you’re using a monochannel mic to record please please please remember to set the audio track with it to mono so it’s not all in my right ear, it unfortunately makes the video unlistenable.
Thanks for the feedback. I am new to this so I will look into resolving that!
Update: I have found the issue and will get it resolved moving forward
@@zanejacksondiscgolf good to hear (no pun intended). As much as it seems like a small thing, having good audio (getting a mic setup with minimal background noise, good levels in to avoid peaking, an okay EQ to touch up your voice a bit, and good output levels as well as attention to left and right channels) is probably one of the most important factors for a video doing well. At least, if you have bad audio, it almost doesn’t matter how good the content is lol. There are plenty of tutorials online for each of these things, they should only take a few minutes to learn what you need to have decent audio, but they are incredibly useful.
Best of luck to you!
Edit: unplugged my headphones so I could give a closer listen for some extra feedback, I’m a bit bored right now so why not. I can tell you have a nice voice to listen to, by the way. I would try seeing if you can safely clip your lapel mic lower on your shirt, perhaps at heart level. You might find you get a clearer voice sound (less muffling on the detail and better low tones) as well as less breath sound as you throw and stuff. Now, I can’t tell if there is a good wind guard on the mic right now, but you might find you run into more wind sound when you no longer have your beard acting as a blocker 😂. I also think some light EQ could also help bring out your voice better and make it sound great. There should be plenty of short vids on EQing voice for YT vids on different software, many editing programs will have a feature built in for it. Overall I liked the content here and your presentation, your manner of speaking, the filming with a drone to show the flights better, the editing was clean. I think you can definitely go pretty far.
@aaronmueller1560 thank you very much for all the tips! I will try out your suggestions and look forward to hearing more from you in the future!