This is a graceful way to reduce the price: decontenting via removing video, Live View the frameline preview lever, and the brass top plate (which actually adds a ton of weight and adds no value to black or silver chrome).
Five grand is actually a steal for the kind of quality the sensor delivers, provided that in the 1,000+ you saved, you don't lose something else you wanted. I'm sorry for the people who can't seem to keep their hands off the video or Live View buttons - the loss of the EVF is actually a huge loss in functionality. First, it eliminates your ability to accurately focus super-speed lenses (and any R or other SLR lens, slide copying rig, etc.). Second, you lose three-axis leveling (no optical accessory finder can show you the X-Y level in two different camera orientations), which is a big deal for architectural or landscape photography. Third, you can't use the camera as a tool to calibrate lenses. Finally, it eliminates the backup focusing method when, inevitably, the RF gets knocked out/drifts of alignment. On these last two points, unless you have an EVF to establish the baseline performance of the lens, you might not even know your lens is acting abnormally.
The illustration photos are awesome, particularly the man sleeping on the bench. Thank your lucky stars that this was not taken in the Englischergarten in Munich.
Dante