Kazemon15 wrote:But how many wins is enough to justify newer videos getting knocked out for 4 year old winning videos?
If I remember correctly, one year, there was this one Fate Stay Night AMV that made it into the action category and it was a winner as it was a winner in other cons 4 years prior. Doesn't that hurt the competition a little bit as well? Not only does it hurt the competition, but it also tells the creator of the newer AMVs that "AX only wants winning videos, why bother sending at all?"
I agree with that. If a video is four years old, it needs to stay out. Check out my earlier agreement with Castor's "freshness" rule.
Kazemon15 wrote:Also, to add to this, the "best" of the "best" is very opinionated. I was told that some of my AMVs were the best they have seen...while others said that they were crap and unwatchable.
Exactly. Audiences are different, so there is no reason to prevent a video that has previously won from competing. One audience may think it's awesome, another audience may think it sucks.
Kazemon15 wrote:So the whole "the best of what hasn't won yet" seems kind of an insult. Are you saying that if a video hasn't won something, it doesn't even deserve to be in a "best" overall title, regardless if it's in a category of winners or against videos that haven't won yet?
See my previous argument regarding Kevin Caldwell. He powned AX before the term existed, but I didn't take it as an indication that my videos were bad. Instead, I accepted the challenge and stepped up my game. This is why, IMHO, trolling rules do not encourage us to improve as editors.
Kazemon15 wrote:This is also kinda subjective... Every rule has its flaws. Sure, it may be the "best", but it's only a matter of opinion of the judges. Everyone's video is under the opinion of what the judges think are the "best." If one truly wants to be "fair and square", why not just let the audience pick from the entire mass of entries as the best ones? But that's impossible, isn't it? It'll tire the audience out. No matter what, nothing can really be "fair and square."
"Fair and square" doesn't mean the audience has to watch all the videos. Time constraints make that impossible, and that's why judges choose finalists. However, it should mean that the contest must be open to all comers, including those who have won previously. And if, as you say, it's only a matter of opinion, then perhaps that video won't make the finals, either because they didn't agree with the other convention, or other editors actually made better videos. It's been known to happen.
Kazemon15 wrote:I can't tell you how many times (no offense to Shin, as I do love this AMV) I've seen Safety Dance. I can only stand seeing that AMV so many times before getting bored of it. And that goes for the audience as well.
Then wouldn't the audience's boredom with that video give others a chance to win?
Kazemon15 wrote:The one year I went to Anime LA, Fanime and AX in the same year...I saw the same AMV get in at all three times.More than likely, if I can go to these same cons, so can audience. And if they go to one AMV contest, what makes you think they do not go to others? And I also know there are fanatic con-goers who go to other cons as well, in different states. How do you think they feel to pay a plane ticket to see the same lineup again and again in not one state, but several?
With the cost of airfare, I sincerely doubt the average con-goer can afford to go to multiple cons these days. Note that in your case, all three of the conventions you went to were in California. I can only afford to go to AX these days, and even then, I can't afford to stay in the hotel. So I only get to see one contest. If I'm lucky, I get to go to FanimeCon, which has some overlap, but I don't let it get to me, as there are sufficient different AMV's to keep me entertained, and the results are almost always different.
Kazemon15 wrote:The creator knows what kind of cons they're submitting to. If they want their videos to be at a big-name convention and contest, they can hold off on submitting to smaller conventions, or send their older winning videos to those conventions instead. After all, this is what Akross does and I don't see anyone having a problem with it.
Indirectly, this was the point I was trying to get at. If Otakon is to be 100% fair about the trolling rule, it needs to disqualify ALL videos that have won best-in-show at previous conventions, including those that were awarded after its submission deadline. Otherwise, you get what happened in 2010, where "And Now A Word from Out Sponsors" won best-in-show at AX and Otakon. Not a successful result of the trolling rule, was it (the video's awesomeness notwithstanding)? If a creator has a problem with the possibility that their video may get DQ'ed without any opportunity for submitting another video, then they should do as you suggest - hold off on submitting to smaller conventions where they have a better chance of winning, or perhaps submit a different video.