Right now it would be easy to think you're watching a movie trailer.
There the atmospheric scene setters, sweeping vistas and aerial drone shots.
But this is actually a wedding video.
I was thinking this is the best content I've ever seen. It's real people, real stories, but professional production.
Rachel Silver is the founder of Love Stories TV, an online platform for watching and sharing professionally produced wedding videos.
We have thousands of wedding films from all over the world and they've all been contributed by newlyweds or filmmakers.
So who exactly is tuning in? And is there really an audience for wedding videos of strangers?
Many of our viewers have grown up on reality TV.The Bachelor has been on television their entire lives. It's about the love story. Inevitably in a wedding film, it comes out how you met, how you fell in love. They interview the friends and the family members, so you walk away with just this overwhelming sense of joy.
Besides its entertainment value, Love Stories TV may prove helpful when it comes to wedding planning.
Listing the venues, florist's, dressmakers and more depicted in each video, which are searchable by location, religion, culture and even sexual orientation.
Jennifer Thompson works for a wedding videography company and says the website has helped spur business.
It's a great place for us to contribute our work, get it in front of more potential clients.
Cynics may roll their eyes at the self-congratulatory couples, but Silver who regrets passing up the chance to have her own wedding documented argues that these milestone moments are rare.
All of their family and friends and the people they love the most are surrounding them and that only happens to you a handful of times in your entire life.
All the more reason perhaps, to preserve the moment for posterity… or late-night binge-watching.
Tina Trinh VOA news New York.