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Too many. I collect special interests.
The one that's lasted the longest are:
Filmmaking (specifically no/low budget filmmaking) with the premise being that regardless of tools, there are things that anyone can do to improve their product without a large budget. (ie. remembering to record tone for later editing. Planning your shoot for the proper time of day. Using reflectors even if you can't afford lights. Blocking and Business, Shooting enough coverage for later editing, etc...) A large amount of quality in low budget films comes from taking the time to actually plan things out rather than just showing up with a camera and pointing it at volunteer actors.
Things like proper blocking, shot planning, etc... are free. With digital cameras, film isn't a commodity and there's nothing stopping you from filming enough angles to give the video editor something to work with rather than just constant two-shots. Editing software itself is free.
Point being, there is no excuse for lazy filmmaking, even if you don't have access to expensive equipment. Planning trumps equipment 90% of the time.
Okay...rant over.
Most things in this world are 90% prep, 10% execution.