I'm actually a wedding photographer at the moment (mostly a part time thing but hoping to make it full time - yes yes, hard to make it in this digital era and all that jazz). I guess I'm a part of the newer crowd of wedding photogs. Most of my fellow colleagues are entirely digital and life is on Facebook, Instagram, Snapchat, wedding blogs, etc.
As I did a lot of second shooting this year, I used mainly digital as it made a lot more sense economically (shooting film as a second shooter would've cost me more than my getting paid). When I did my own assignments, it was always film + digital. I appreciate the benefits of digital but there's just something about film that keeps me wanting to use it. Look, feel, negatives, dynamic range... you name it.
Despite some of the craziness that happens during a wedding day, I really enjoy being able to do wedding photography. I enjoy the intimacy that comes with being the main guy to be with the bride and groom and being able to document the different parts of the day. Capturing the emotions and getting to know people in this way is something else. When I'm not doing weddings, I'm usually doing a form of street or documentary photography (sometimes a project). I actually see weddings as form of "street photography", albeit without being yelled at for taking photos
Stories... stories... hmm... Not too many thus far that I can think of, although I'm always surprised at the amount of drinking that happen just before a wedding day starts (guess it calms the nerves and loosens you up?). Some people get loud but thankfully no falls or utter craziness yet.
HOWEVER, I have three main pet peeves that occur at most of the weddings I attend:
1) Cellphones and ipad screens. I do use these creatively as part of my shots if the lighting is right. However, if it's a critical shot, I expect Aunt Sandy to stay in her seat and not wielding her large iPad into the ceremony line while I'm trying to take a photograph.
2) Video teams when there's limited space. I usually shoot solo and prefer it as there's less bodies and less commotion for my couples. I appreciate the work that video teams do but sometimes there's just tooo many of them. When space is super crammed, then we're all in each other's shot and I have to be a bit of a jerk and get in there way because frankly... I need to get my shot. Video teams, we love working with you but there sure are a lot of us in that 4 foot aisle!
3) Uncle Bob's and Auntie May's: I totally understand that guests are an important part of a day. Being a documentary photographer, I will sometimes include people taking photos with their own cameras. When I attend weddings, I too like to take photographs. However, there are times when relatives of the bride and groom tend to make it their personal mission to be the main photographer and they'll get in the way of the photoshoot (onboard flash pops up and I'm like.... oh dear). At the distances I'm operating in (and especially if the space is really tight), the only way to blur them out if with a F0.11 lens or something..... Occasionally I have literally bumped shoulders with them (hockey-mode starts turning on). I'm polite about it (I apologize for the bump) but I have a job to do.
One last point: Film photography allows a certain creativity that I can't get with digital. I'm so glad we still have film.