Article: For Chicago or Turabian style formatting, the name you use as the first part of your citation depends on the focus of the video and why you're referencing it in your work.  For example, suppose you have the video of an interview that you want to use as a reference in your paper. If the person being interviewed is the reason you're referencing the video, you would put their name first in the citation. However, if your paper evaluated interviewing styles and techniques, your focus would be on the interviewer, so you'd put their name first. Names are listed in "last name, first name" format. For example: "Harwood, John." If the principle subject of the video is the video itself, or if there is no principle subject, leave this part of the citation off and move on to the title. For a full video, place the title of the video in italics immediately following the first name or names that you listed in your citation. Use the same capitalization as in the video itself.  If you're citing a shorter clip, put the title in quotation marks rather than in italics. For example: Harwood, John.  “The Pros and Cons of Biden.”  Include the names of the director or key performers, if they are relevant to the reason you are citing the work. This typically comes up when citing motion pictures or creative works. For example: "Joe Versus the Volcano. Directed by John Patrick Shanley." Tell readers where and when the video was published and distributed. Start with the year of copyright or publication, then the location, then the production or distribution company. If the year the video was made differs from the copyright year, include that year at the end. For example: "Joe Versus the Volcano. Directed by John Patrick Shanley. 1990. Burbank, CA: Warner Home Video, 2002." Close your citation by identifying specifically how you accessed the video. For online video clips, include the time length of the recording and a direct URL to the video.  For example: "Harwood, John. “The Pros and Cons of Biden.” New York Times video, 2:00. August 23, 2008. http://video.on.nytimes.com/?fr_story=a425c9aca92f51bd19f2a621fd93b5e266507191." If you watched the video using a physical medium, such as a DVD, you don't need as much information. For example: "Joe Versus the Volcano. Directed by John Patrick Shanley. 1990. Burbank, CA: Warner Home Video, 2002. DVD." Chicago and Turabian styles use either footnotes or parenthetical citations. The format for footnotes is similar to the format for the bibliography. For parenthetical citations, simply use the last name listed first in your citation, followed by a comma and the year of publication.  For example: "(Harwood, 2008)." If the title of the video appears first in your full citation, you can use the first word from the title, or a keyword. Just make sure it adequately identifies the correct citation. For example: "("Joe," 1990).

What is a summary?
Start with the principle subject of the video. Provide the title of the work. Provide a date of copyright or publication. Note the medium or where the video can be found. Use the author-date system for in-text citations.