Honest opinion and money better spent... don't go to college (seems counter intuitive but hear me out) and instead find a good mentor in that field/area of interest, i.e. a film or videography business or private videographer/photographer.
Find a way to begin working for them as an apprentice and you'll begin gaining real world experience. It is possible to find apprenticeship type work that is paid, which would be great to satisfy both the experience that you're looking for as well as help pay some of those living wages.
The money you'd be spending on college, use it to go towards purchasing any equipment you'd need to get started on following that dream. Most hiring agents these days aren't impressed by a certificate or piece of paper that says you attended. They want to see real results and measurables with that work experience.
Taking a class or two at the local community college in videography and/or history is not a bad idea, but you'll waste a lot of time and money going to a 4-year university in pursuit of this (my opinion). I went to school originally for photography (4-year degree program) and switched majors after 1 year because I knew I was waisting time, especially as the market was changing over from 35mm to digital. The money I would have spent in college could have built an entire studio set decked out with equipment (and saved wasted time).
The perk of going to college... that's when I discovered metal detecting
BOOM! That's my soapbox speech. Hope any of it helps. Cheers!