I have a GH3 and E-M1, and for your intended use I would definitely go for the E-M1. A lot of people will say it can't be used for serious work, which is wrong in my opinion. Like all of our tools it has weaknesses that we have to work around, but it has some major strengths-not only the amazing stabilisation on all of your lenses but great dynamic range, great ergonomics and build, excellent EVF, good skin tones and good colour out of camera. When Canon introduced video dSLR with the mark II, everyone complained about 30p but it didn't stop us utilising the strengths the camera offered. With the E-M1 most of your shots are usable without any post-stabilisation, you can shoot faster and can pull off camera moves handheld that you would not usually even consider with other cameras. Would you use a E-M1 on a studio shoot or narrative film, when you have time and money to set-up a shot etc -no but for solo shooting, run and gun, travel-documentary type work, I think its a great option.