By PhotoJoe on Tuesday, 11 November 2025
Category: News

Cammie Walkie Pointed a Camera at My Chaos (and Made a Movie)

AKA: The day Cameron Walker—Cammie Walkie to the real ones—decided to document my misadventures in the Copperverse, where I answer to Chowdah Chan (and sometimes PhotoJoe when there's a lens in my hand).

If the Copperverse is a circus, I'm the guy sprinting across the tightrope with a GoPro, and Cammie Walkie is the calm ringleader whispering, "Keep rolling." His new documentary follows me through the dust, pixels, and punchlines of a world where streams never sleep, cameras always find the messies, and friendship is the only stable tripod we've got.

Meet the Director: Cameron "Cammie Walkie" Walker

Cammie isn't just a friend with a camera—he's a human steadicam. Where I see a bit, he sees a story; where I see chaos, he hears rhythm. He has that rare documentarian's patience: the kind that keeps rolling past the pratfalls until you stumble into something true. His style is part backstage pass, part field guide, and all heart.

Who I Am in There (Depends Who's Asking)

Cammie's film catches both. One minute I'm mic'd up and monologuing; the next I'm silently framing a shot while the stream chat turns into a bonfire behind us.

The Messies (Selected Greatest Hits)

Cameos, Community, and Copper

The Copperverse runs on big energy and bigger personalities. CopperCab swings through like a meteor—bright, loud, gravitational. Our banter is half improv, half sibling rivalry, 100% watchable. Some inside jokes stay off-camera (you're welcome), but the camaraderie doesn't. What the film shows best is how this weird little universe makes room for all our characters—and the real people underneath them.

What Makes the Doc Work (Besides My Perfectly Chaotic Face)

Cammie edits like he's tuning a guitar—tightening until the tension sings.

The Part I Didn't Expect

Between pratfalls and punchlines, Cammie kept finding these small moments: the way a crowd settles when the cameras cut; how a nickname holds you steady when the comments don't; how chasing a shot can feel like chasing yourself. The movie ends up being about identity as much as content—why we perform, and how we come back to earth after the stream ends.

Why You Should Watch

Watch It / Share It / Roast Me Gently 

After you watch, tell me your favorite scene. If it's "Glittergate," you owe me a lint roller.

Credits & Shout-Outs

Final word: I make the messies. Cammie makes them make sense. That's the documentary—and honestly, that's the friendship.

Leave Comments