2018-03-27T09:43:37+00:00February 23rd, 2012|Tags: , , |

I should have started a timer to see how long it will take pluraleyes to process all of this.

p.s. love you pluraleyes <3

For now, editing is a commodity and less a craft

2011-12-06T18:13:36+00:00December 6th, 2011|Tags: , , |

Millions upon millions of people now have access to really good video editing tools, but that doesn’t make them an editor. Earning a paycheck doesn’t make you an editor either. I’ve met “professionals” who have full time jobs that can’t cut their way out of a paper bag. And then I meet kids in school or college that just blow me away with their sense of timing.

….

Long term, the craft of editing is probably stronger than ever. Now that the tools are in the hands of the many, we’ll discover some new folks who just blow us away with their storytelling skills. But short term, many long time professionals could get hurt when editing decisions are based on price alone and not the skill of the artist. Like anything else, with storytelling you generally get what you pay for.

– Walter »

2018-03-27T09:51:47+00:00September 9th, 2011|Tags: , , , , |

checkthegate:

FCP X: Didn’t We Ask For This? by Jeremy Garchow

CTG: I want to commend Jeremy Garchow for this excellent piece on FCP X. A lot of people are torching him for it in the comments section, yet most of them don’t use any specifics on why they believe the program isn’t what we (“editors”) asked for. Good work Jeremy, you make a lot of great points and the article really delves into the new functions of FCP X. It’s absolutely worth a read fellow Tumblr’s. I know FCP X has been polarizing, but it’s time to stop kicking and screaming and start trying to wrap our heads around the software.

(above article link via: creativecow.net)

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