I think I agree with Dan that the best way to promote film is to try to be positive about its use.
For the last four years I've had to print in a darkroom that is about 45*F in the winter, just because I have nowhere else to set up. I've relied on a hot water jacket, and when it's acceptable temperature in the darkroom, in the summer time, I typically don't want to be indoors in a darkroom. I've tried to produce work from there, and it's been challenging, but kept at it and kept myself from getting too rusty. Yesterday I plugged in a 40" long heater tray made for keeping food hot, and I was able to place three 12x16" trays side by side, which kept the chemistry at a snug and comfy 70*F instead, and I found that true joy of the craft again, a joy that has been missing for years now.
It reminded me just how exciting darkroom printing is, where the process comes full circle. Photo paper was designed to work with negatives and the tone curves of both fit together like hand in glove. To see the results of all the decisions I made and instinctive reactions I had in the field, photographing, from exposure to film processing, to agitation, and to printing, and finally to toning, is remarkable every time, and when it comes together it's such a beautiful thing.
I hope that more people in the future have the opportunity to at least experience what us darkroom workers do, so that the decision of what they choose as their medium is based on something they tried for themselves, and not the feedback they get from learning from others. I really believe it's a process that must be physically experienced to be fully appreciated.
That's where a positive spin on darkroom and film work comes in handy, to attract those users that are curious.
I also agree that we all have a right to our opinions, but also that sometimes those opinions are not useful, even if we ourselves opine that it's good information. I guess I'd like to promote a balance between information that is useful from a standpoint of knowledge, and information that is useful to our subculture of film/darkroom photography as a whole.
I know I've been stuck in peeing contests more than once, and I almost always regret it, because it doesn't help the state of film photography, but rather detracts. Personal pride gets in the way.
For what it's worth, I think the video was OK. Hopefully Kodak, Indie Photo Labs, and the photographers have some benefit from it.