I've carried AIWB for over 25 years. I carry that way now. If the gun is out of the holster I almost always remove the holster from my belt, holster the gun, and then place it back on my belt. I do on rare occasions holster my Shield 9 without removing the holster but it's a Shield V1 with a safety. It has the long factory trigger and I use the safety to holster it and then remove the safety. I take care no clothes are in the way. I don't like the Shield V2 for those reasons. The guy in the video looks to have been wearing a white T under his top shirt. I'd bet money that was the culprit. With my Officers model I have a sweat shield that protects the safety and hammer from my fat roll. I treat Glocks the same way.
+1
Coming up on 40 years of almost (literally almost) daily carry. The last 10+ has OFTEN been AIWB. The last 5 or so with a P365.
Over the years I have heard the same sort of message with any and every form of carry. There USED to be a contingent (and not a small one) in my very early days that preached that anyone who carried an auto on their person IWB with a round chambered was an idiot and would absolutely shoot themselves at some point if their lunacy did not stop!
Like all things internet... what do you want to hear? 5 minutes and you will find a community already singing your song.
For me, AIWB with the little SIG and occasionally up to a G19 size auto requires a kydex AIWB with a good strong belt clip, not just any as there are many that do not hold well, or that are on holsters not made well to support the clip. It must fully cover the trigger guard without contacting the trigger in any position, and retain the gun with almost a snap at the bottom of the insert stroke and a quick release on the way out.
These days kydex makers range from excellent quality to folks with an oven, a couple blocks of foam glued to plywood, a Dremel tool and an Etsy account. (Also a couple of excellent makers on Etsy).
Re-holstering when seated, and sometimes when standing, means using my off hand to release and remove the holster from my waist, holstering the gun while pointed in a safe manner and then re-inserting into my waistband with my thumb retaining the pistol firmly in the holster as it is inserted and clipped on to my belt. This works perfectly for me and my body type, clothing choices, etc. I am not maintaining that it would work for all.
Being in the habit of doing that I am perfectly comfortable with AIWB. If I was a weekend warrior who only did this occasionally, and not often enough to be completely comfortable with my own process and skill, I absolutely would not carry AIWB. Under those conditions I might even consider going back to empty chamber to keep my comfort level up.
One thing I would NOT do is make a blanket statement that AIWB is never a good idea for anyone under any circumstance.
There is an old saying about "absolutes" as they apply to advice and those who give that type of advice. Google it and find one you like!
