This is handheld documentary footage recorded on an early-2000s consumer DV camcorder by someone sit
This is handheld documentary footage recorded on an early-2000s consumer DV camcorder by someone sitting in the audience at Stanford University. The footage feels like real, imperfect home video of a historic inspirational speech. The recording shows Steve Jobs standing at the podium on an outdoor stage during a sunny graduation ceremony. He is wearing his signature black turtleneck and jeans, speaking passionately while occasionally looking down at his notes. Rows of graduates in caps and gowns sit in front of him, with proud families and faculty visible in the background under bright California sunlight. The camera moves naturally with small movements from the person sitting in the audience, occasionally panning slightly toward the stage and back to the crowd, while maintaining the unstable handheld feel. It captures Jobs’ gestures, the graduates listening intently, and occasional reactions from the audience with realistic timing. The handheld camera shows constant small movements from people shifting in their seats, heavy shake, drifting framing, autofocus struggling with the bright sunlight and moving subjects, lens breathing, and typical DV camcorder imperfections. Despite the imperfections, motion remains coherent and natural. Natural sound only: Steve Jobs’ clear voice delivering the speech, occasional applause and laughter from the crowd, light wind, and ambient outdoor sounds. No music. The result must feel like real footage filmed by someone during Steve Jobs’ Stanford Commencement Speech in June 2005, captured on an old DV camcorder. Prioritize realistic physics, natural human movement, and authentic camcorder behavior.