Putting a Blu-ray disc in a player & watching the video on your TV is arguably the easiest way to watch that video. And if it's video that you shot with your phone or camera, at roughly 50 cents per disc, Blu-ray is the cheapest way to share that video with friends & family. As a bonus, if you use AVC/H.264 video encoding -- the most common format for Blu-ray -- it's also VERY compatible, natively supported by millions [billions?] of Android cell phones, tablets, & standalone players for TVs. You can burn a couple of Blu-rays for your parents and aunts & uncles, then use the same file on your cell to show your best friend.
That said, broadly speaking there are two ways to go about creating & burning Blu-rays... apps like Tipard Blu-ray Creator are the easiest, but also the most limited. Common ffmpeg-based apps accept almost any type of video, and handle most aspects of getting that video onto a playable Blu-ray disc pretty much automatically. They also limit editing, especially audio editing, and re-encode everything, whether it needs it or not, which in some cases can waste both time & quality. The more pro way to do it is to use editing software for the audio & video, encode both, then import them into a Blu-ray authoring app. Caution: some consumer level authoring apps will still insist on re-encoding -- either avoid them or encode your work in editing software using lossless formats. Either way, the Blu-ray discs you create will look and behave more or less like high rez DVDs -- the fancy menus and features you see on the Blu-ray movie discs you rent or buy use Java code and are created with software costing thousands of dollars.