Mixed media is just a fact of life now. Just since we got married 20 years ago, for example, it went from 'can you beleive they can afford a videographer for their wedding?" to 'so many people are having a videographer maybe I should get one" to "you're choosing THAT videographer? oh...not as good as ours...: This is based on actual conversations we've overhead with varous sets of friends getting married in the intervening years.
Heck, even just a few years ago FB was actual typed posts. Now its 80% images, 15% video and 5% words. Youtube. IG VIDEO, live streaming, twitch,....
You can look back and see how image sensors and processors limited the first digital cameras. They couldn't do video, because they couldn't process it or store it. Resolution wars started and to get the megapixel crown the manufacturers had to push technology on support hardware to be able to deal with it. Then, it broke through to the point where video and stills were possible in one body. And beyond possible, but so aligned in hardware needs that it would be apply the famous cripple hammer to not enable both.
The same happened to mobile phones. Very few people lament they day they could still find true innovation in "calling only" cellular devices. (At least until they have kids that they want to isolate from the horrors of social media and texting
).
Just gotta roll with it. Video and stills are forever intertwined. And they will be in whatever comes after ILC cameras too. Harry Potter moving 3D photos are nearly here!
Brian