You should read this: https://support.apple.com/guide/mac-help/types-of-disks-you-can-use-with-time-machine-mh15139/mac
"Note: The entire APFS volume is reserved for Time Machine backups. If you want to store files other than the Time Machine backup on the same physical device, use Disk Utility to create an additional APFS volume on the disk. The two volumes then share the available space."
As previously noted, the Time Machine destination disk needs to be APFS formatted. SO you have to reformat anyway. Which means you need to copy off all those other files from the external drive first.
The arrangement I recommend is:
- Separate disk for Time Machine backups of your Big Sur computer, that backup disk must be APFS
- A separate (from the Time Machine disk) disk for miscellaneous storage of files (videos, pictures, etc.)
- A third disk to backup the second disk used for miscellaneous storage
By the way, I would also recommend more than one backup disk for each of the disks you are backing up. Some people object to that due to the cost: my response is always, is permanent loss of "old videos, pictures, etc." worth it to save $100? Every single disk that you use, whether as the primary one or the backup one, whether SSD or HDD, will eventually fail someday. It is a matter of when, not if. These failures start to happen after 3-5 years of constant use, some last a lot longer, some shorter.