This document discusses different camera styles used in documentary filmmaking and their implications. It begins by describing how filmmakers often discover important insights too late, after filming is complete. It then discusses the filmmaker's discovery that intercutting shots from multiple camera positions undermined the sense of immediacy they aimed to convey by acknowledging the filmmaking process. This led them to realize fictional film conventions are incompatible with documenting real people and events. The document argues that most shots in fiction films assume an invisible observer and are "privileged" in a way that real life is not.