Shooting
Buying film, storing film, and loading film are all definitely more difficult than dealing with their digital memory card counterparts. Just the act of loading film is intimidating enough to keep plenty of people from attempting to shoot film (myself included for a long time!). And even after you load it, there’s a much steeper learning curve of figuring out how to shoot properly so that your photos turn out reliably. There’s no instant LCD feedback that assures you’re doing things correctly. Most film shooters also use external light meters (handheld devices that take light readings) instead of trusting their cameras. Again, this will vary depending on your gear, but a lot of film cameras are manual– manual focus, manual settings, etc. Other film cameras have less controls but more variation/unpredictability. So yes, digital is definitely easier to shoot.
One more thing– when you load a roll of film, you are tied to that particular film speed for the rest of your roll. So you have basically no way of moving between very dark spaces and bright spaces unless you have multiple cameras on hand. Digital cameras are equipped to adjust to changing light conditions all the time.