VERY RELATABLE! great video with great info, as always. just one note: the opposite of pro isn't lazy. absolutely agree with everything you said, but the comparison is with an amateur editor. might even be a better word for the algorithm (;
@@ryanavelar2711 and especially how can you not see that making a video (having product placement is okay) where you say that all your problem as an editor would be solved with only a 3060 laptop when today the only 2 true upgrades for editing is either m1 products or 3080/90 desktop... I mean how can you not see that your video is turning into a full product placement when you make a topic about pro editor but recommand low/mid tier laptop!? 😂
Opening skit? DaVinci Resolve. yes I know there's a learning curve. but with the money you save by not needing premiere/after effects and the wealth of high quality tutorials on youtube by people like Casey Faris, it's well worth the switch.
One tip for archiving that project: Project Manager Use the Project Manager function in Premiere Pro. This creates a folder with a copy of the project file and allows you to select the sequences you want to save. It then copies all the assets used in those sequences to that folder. This way you keep all the relevant data and can delete the rest... unless you need to keep all the clips you shot instead of the selects.
I can't believe I ignored this to create it manually. Went to Fullsail and instead of showing how awesome this is, was told to build the backups manually. Thank you.
@@Digitallifeconcepts I'm sure that's a good skill to have if you're using software that doesn't have this feature. If you do it manually, then you absolutely know you have averything you need to keep. I get why they focused on that, do develop the skill. I think beginning editors should learn linear first. The mindset that develops of building the edit in your head before you start helps people become faster editors. You get the sequence done, then use the features of non-linear to finesse it.
I have been content creating for friends/small businesses for the last 4 years. To Chris's point at the end of the video, video editors/content creators ARE NEEDED by many businesses currently. I just left 12 years in retail sales to take creating full time for a mortgage company. what a breath of fresh air! id rather adjust cuts for my new bosses than help Betty reset her Apple ID for the 4th time in one week 😂 stepping stones my friends haha
Hi Chris. You say you are creating for a mortgage company now. I also have worked in mortgage compliance and also taking up videography. I really want to talk to you!
I guess what I find difficult about the “wearing different hats” tip is that the way I edit is more of a free form approach. I’m not really sure what the video will become from the get go, so I add things as I’m inspired. I definitely have an idea going into it but it usually never ends up being what I initially set out to do, in the best way lol. So for personal projects I don’t know if I find that tip to be helpful. However, when I’m editing for clients, that’s EXACTLY what I do. Videos I make for clients usually have a more formulaic approach to them so there isn’t really a lot of room for super creative ideas. Good video!
Wearing different hats actually gets me through creative blocks. For example, if I'm having a block about the story I'll switch to something a bit more mindless like color, sound design, etc. and usually that time away from the story allows me to come back to it with some new ideas. Arguably more efficient than spinning in circles about something. I'd probably call this video inexperienced editor vs. pro editor.
The most important thing to break out of creative blocks is to write down the idea (what it is about), and the premise (what message you want to give) of your project. Do it on a piece of paper. Write the spine of that project so that you always can come back to that and finish what you started. Especially in the first phase of editing (the story, and the length) if you work on other areas, it can become messy to cut off, some parts you can really end up liking because you put work, but as a professional, you really have to murder your darlings sometimes. Hope that tip helps you as much as it helps me!
I would somewhat rephrase this to Beginner Vs. Pro Video Editor -- the reason being, pros can still be lazy sometimes. Case in point-- I've been an editor for 9 years... for client projects, I keep everything neat in a folder, but for quick edits, especially for myself, it's just not worth my time to go that extra mile for a piece of content I know I'll never need to use again. So, I think the distinction there is that pros (hate to call myself a pro, but I have done this for a long time) know when it's more efficient to be lazy, when it's not worth it to put in the time on certain things, whereas beginners wouldn't... it takes time to know what works and what doesn't.
I guess thats what makes a difference. At some point, as an editor, you learn to adjust your workflow very quickly. You see a project quickly and you can make quick changes to earn HOURS of yours and your clients time. Sometimes the lazy way just gets the job done very quickly. For example, a 15 seconds tiktok. Im not gonna make audio buses, or fiddle with tons of layers. I guess you just learn to adapt, to earn time.
Should also note, that video editing is a lot like 3D design. I'm an editor and VFX compositor, and many things I do involves Cinema4D and working with 3D rendering... you make pass after pass after pass on what you want, not all at once. First render the model, then the shadow, then the alpha, then the ambient occlusion, then the global illumination, then any particle effects you made. It all is a step-by-step process. Also side side note, never work with footage from the C:\ drive if you can. Premiere and AE are disk hogs, so if you can, put footage on a different disk location.
Great video man. I love that you sprinkle in a little bit of humour and entertainment through your content, it makes it so much more enjoyable to watch. Question on the storage - do you keep your raw footage after you make a TH-cam video or do you delete it?
Im with Andres on this one, never delete anything! If you work with a ton of 4k, 8k etc, then a good NAS will be a very worthy investment. If you're storage needs are not as massive then a large external harddrive like WD Easystore or G-Drive should do, and just buy a new one when the old one fills up. Cloud storage is also worth looking into incase your house burns down (knock on wood). These have been my strategies anyways 🙅♀
i just started video editing for about 2 months now and its one heck of a ride.....It can be overwhelming sometimes but its people like you who give us reasons to keep going.Thanks so much
I hopped back into a half edited video after 10 months of nothing and subconsciously learnt about 3 of these tips, my highest recommendation is to go slow and don't burn out, keep it interesting and keep it going.
Scenario 1 really spoke to me. I have never gone to schoool for editing, but have been saving up to audit some college classes for editing hopefully this fall or winter. But anyways, I've been the guy that changes his hat every few clips. Thanks for this! I think now I will be able to get better results and finish quicker. I have found that I will always decide what song to use AFTER getting all my A-roll organized so that I can then know how to cut and adjust my B-roll. All my edits are either for YT or shorter social media videos, so I will cut to the beat most of the time.
I honestly thought #1 & #2 was part of the workflow, for most people, from the get go. Always made sense to me to finish what you started before moving on, and to stay organised so life was made easier down the track. Those other tips are SUPER helpful tho!
I fully went into this episode thinking that it would make me feel like a lazy editor and what it actually did was make me realize I had really good habits.
Scenario 2: Just fasten your external drives to the lid of your laptop with velcro strips to keep them from going anywhere when you're using them (black blends in nicely it seems). I regularly hitchhike with my laptop thousands of KM across Canada every summer and have had zero concerns about my external drives being knocked off any tables or any of that crap in the 3 or 4 years i've been doing that. It also just frees up a bit of room on whatever table/surface your working from :)
Easy solution for storage is a 2 bay enclosure with a built in RAID controller. Slap 2 4TB SSD's (or HDD's if you don't need the speed) and set it to RAID 1. Golden. If you do a little looking you can find a 4 bay hdd enclosure with RAID 3 support and USB C which is ideal for a solo editor. Either of these are a very easy and hastle free solution. If you're doing client work you should even have a backup of your RAID array because if the unit fails you don't want to be sitting around doing nothing.
Excellent video all around Chris. Excellent advice here. Even on the items I knew your perspective helped reinforce some of those points. Great lighting.
Yo that first part legit made me think - Has this dude been watching me?? 😂 I’m 2 videos deep and so glad I’ve come across your video. Although my first experience with editing (32 years old and haven’t touched a laptop in a few years 😅) it’s been extremely fun learning something new but also painfully slow haha. I’ll get better 💪 Shot for the content bro 🤙
thanks man, just did a test edit and realized my more narrative style is != to dynamic youtube style and that i still have a bit to learn for those techniques
Love the hat-switching visual analogy. It's a bad habit I sometimes fall back into. Especially when I want to nail the hook of the video. Except the hook should be made after everything else is made
I find it interesting that a lot of these tips are things that I naturally just developed over the course of years on TH-cam. #1 - I've trended towards scripting videos and recording everything 1 one long clip from the start. Cutting out bloopers and silences essentially just left me with a story pass to add B roll and graphics to. #2 - Transitioning from a Laptop to Desktop and working with multiple hard drives with limited capacities just naturally lends to learning better practices for asset management (I keep backups of my main stock footage folders and have a few dedicated archival drives #3 - Upgrading my hardware for game development purposes and having an IT background(niche case I suppose) naturally lent itself towards this as I already understood PC specs and checking the software-hardware dynamics came naturally. Buying an NVIDIA GPU to leverage premiere and raytracing comes hand in hand #4 - Can't speak to this one much as I'm still adapting to new formats. Admittedly, this can be a bit more natural if you grew up with social media and subconsciously imitate what you see already on set platforms #5 - You never really get a "perfect" grasp on this. Admittedly, with enough videos made in a set style, you learn your tendencies. My old B-Roll heavy videos took around 1-2 hours per minute of video to create. Switching to having A roll literally improved efficiency by over 100%, allowing me to literally 3X my video release rate while still having time to do game development. Great tips overall. Would have loved to have seen a video like this 8 years ago 🤣. If there's a bigger tip overall, I suppose the #0 tip to differentiate a Lazy vs a Pro editor, it's: a Pro Editor edits A LOT of videos 😅.
Thanks for this amazing video, Have been editing videos for almost 4 years! But doing it as you mentioned here in this video, It's a lot easier and faster. seen some of my friends doing it differently, they change their hats a lot!
@ 3:56 you triggered me. Thanks for that. I always have 3 sources on location shoots now. Primary project drive, backup project drive & the OG camera cards (unless I run out and need to format them) I typically hand off the backup to another member of the crew if possible. Also, use Post Haste from digital rebellion to organize your project folder structure. Life. Saver.
I'm so glad that I passed the first test! 🙌 to me, it was always the best way to get the "foundation" of the film done and then go back and get all the B roll, sound effects, and extras!
Chris, the reason I don’t buy camera gear through Best Buy is despite them being a vendor for American Airlines, they don’t reward miles for buying cameras, drones, or computers. I only found this out after buying an Air 2S and not getting my miles. As a wildlife photographer and videographer, it’d be great if they’d have those miles so I could save money in my travels for content creation.
1. That 1st skit was comedy gold for any editor. ( Even da vinci editors) (I'm 50/50) Dude, I totally never realized I do the method of add add add and press play.. Thank you for helping me realize this.
I seriously needed to see this video. So much of what you say is spot on and should have been more obvious... but didn't process in my brain until I heard you say it. Your tips and advice are life changing and save so much time.
As always great relevant information that bring value. I'm constantly learning different and updated techniques from you and the few others that are awesome enough to share. thanks for the great video
Are those dediceated external SSD's are fast enough to able to edit off of them!? I feel like having M2 drives designated on the laptop for edit would be the best choice right? I am only asking because I was thinking about having giant external SSD drives to able to switch between Desktop/Laptop.
How relatable is the opening skit?
Don’t use premier or after effects but still very very relatable 😂
Don't even get me started...
Resolve has something similar. But it usually just self-destructs. ☠️
VERY RELATABLE! great video with great info, as always. just one note: the opposite of pro isn't lazy. absolutely agree with everything you said, but the comparison is with an amateur editor. might even be a better word for the algorithm (;
@@shairamos3778 true I related with both lazy and pro lmao
I was stuck on that Tip #1 for years, just adding whatever in as I go along. Wearing the hats separately has made a huge difference!
Makes a huge difference
Totally agree!
ủa
I used to be stuck on it too until about (clears throat) 10 min ago. How and why did I not know this! great tips!
This whole video is basically a product placement ad. Well done!
I was just looking for this comment 😂
I wonder how many lap tops this man sold for them
@@ryanavelar2711 and especially how can you not see that making a video (having product placement is okay) where you say that all your problem as an editor would be solved with only a 3060 laptop when today the only 2 true upgrades for editing is either m1 products or 3080/90 desktop... I mean how can you not see that your video is turning into a full product placement when you make a topic about pro editor but recommand low/mid tier laptop!? 😂
Skipping at beginning ads
comment is on fire
I think you’re confusing amateur editors with lazy editors.
Opening skit?
DaVinci Resolve.
yes I know there's a learning curve.
but with the money you save by not needing premiere/after effects and the wealth of high quality tutorials on youtube by people like Casey Faris, it's well worth the switch.
One tip for archiving that project: Project Manager
Use the Project Manager function in Premiere Pro. This creates a folder with a copy of the project file and allows you to select the sequences you want to save. It then copies all the assets used in those sequences to that folder. This way you keep all the relevant data and can delete the rest... unless you need to keep all the clips you shot instead of the selects.
Omg…. This is so damn valuable to me. THANK YOU!!!
Nice tip man !! I just consolidate libraries in FCP.
How much is premier pro?
I can't believe I ignored this to create it manually. Went to Fullsail and instead of showing how awesome this is, was told to build the backups manually. Thank you.
@@Digitallifeconcepts I'm sure that's a good skill to have if you're using software that doesn't have this feature. If you do it manually, then you absolutely know you have averything you need to keep.
I get why they focused on that, do develop the skill. I think beginning editors should learn linear first. The mindset that develops of building the edit in your head before you start helps people become faster editors. You get the sequence done, then use the features of non-linear to finesse it.
I have been content creating for friends/small businesses for the last 4 years. To Chris's point at the end of the video, video editors/content creators ARE NEEDED by many businesses currently. I just left 12 years in retail sales to take creating full time for a mortgage company. what a breath of fresh air! id rather adjust cuts for my new bosses than help Betty reset her Apple ID for the 4th time in one week 😂 stepping stones my friends haha
This comment alone gives me hope as someone who has been in the retail space for over 2 decades
@@BrandonColeman best of luck to you. You got this 🤘🏼
More success to us all 😎👊🏿
Hi Chris. You say you are creating for a mortgage company now. I also have worked in mortgage compliance and also taking up videography. I really want to talk to you!
The hope I just gained 🥰
I guess what I find difficult about the “wearing different hats” tip is that the way I edit is more of a free form approach. I’m not really sure what the video will become from the get go, so I add things as I’m inspired. I definitely have an idea going into it but it usually never ends up being what I initially set out to do, in the best way lol.
So for personal projects I don’t know if I find that tip to be helpful.
However, when I’m editing for clients, that’s EXACTLY what I do. Videos I make for clients usually have a more formulaic approach to them so there isn’t really a lot of room for super creative ideas.
Good video!
Documentarians use your approach. They find themes in the interviews, make a select reel, and find themes.
Wearing different hats actually gets me through creative blocks. For example, if I'm having a block about the story I'll switch to something a bit more mindless like color, sound design, etc. and usually that time away from the story allows me to come back to it with some new ideas. Arguably more efficient than spinning in circles about something. I'd probably call this video inexperienced editor vs. pro editor.
The most important thing to break out of creative blocks is to write down the idea (what it is about), and the premise (what message you want to give) of your project. Do it on a piece of paper. Write the spine of that project so that you always can come back to that and finish what you started. Especially in the first phase of editing (the story, and the length) if you work on other areas, it can become messy to cut off, some parts you can really end up liking because you put work, but as a professional, you really have to murder your darlings sometimes.
Hope that tip helps you as much as it helps me!
I’ve made every single one of those mistakes. I would have loved to watch this 10 years ago! Thanks for the great content!
👍😎👍 Solid advice painfully earned !
❤️
I would somewhat rephrase this to Beginner Vs. Pro Video Editor -- the reason being, pros can still be lazy sometimes. Case in point-- I've been an editor for 9 years... for client projects, I keep everything neat in a folder, but for quick edits, especially for myself, it's just not worth my time to go that extra mile for a piece of content I know I'll never need to use again. So, I think the distinction there is that pros (hate to call myself a pro, but I have done this for a long time) know when it's more efficient to be lazy, when it's not worth it to put in the time on certain things, whereas beginners wouldn't... it takes time to know what works and what doesn't.
I guess thats what makes a difference. At some point, as an editor, you learn to adjust your workflow very quickly. You see a project quickly and you can make quick changes to earn HOURS of yours and your clients time.
Sometimes the lazy way just gets the job done very quickly. For example, a 15 seconds tiktok. Im not gonna make audio buses, or fiddle with tons of layers. I guess you just learn to adapt, to earn time.
"lazy" is more negative, so it brings in more engagement.
Should also note, that video editing is a lot like 3D design. I'm an editor and VFX compositor, and many things I do involves Cinema4D and working with 3D rendering... you make pass after pass after pass on what you want, not all at once. First render the model, then the shadow, then the alpha, then the ambient occlusion, then the global illumination, then any particle effects you made. It all is a step-by-step process.
Also side side note, never work with footage from the C:\ drive if you can. Premiere and AE are disk hogs, so if you can, put footage on a different disk location.
Great video man. I love that you sprinkle in a little bit of humour and entertainment through your content, it makes it so much more enjoyable to watch. Question on the storage - do you keep your raw footage after you make a TH-cam video or do you delete it?
never delete anything
@@AndresSenande this was my motto until google photos free tier vanished lol. Not so practical these days 😂
Im with Andres on this one, never delete anything! If you work with a ton of 4k, 8k etc, then a good NAS will be a very worthy investment. If you're storage needs are not as massive then a large external harddrive like WD Easystore or G-Drive should do, and just buy a new one when the old one fills up. Cloud storage is also worth looking into incase your house burns down (knock on wood). These have been my strategies anyways 🙅♀
@@joelgodrimedia I raise you frequent 4K videos with pointless footage ;) but I agree with your storage methods, used all at once 👍🏻
Such great advice!
Yoooooo your intro was soooo on point! haha. Great work on all your vides Chris!
By 2:53 I learned I've been editing videos wrong my entire life. Thank you for this video!
bro really likes the MSI Creator Z16 with the G-Force RTX 3060
File management is good and I love it, my first experience was filling in the editor slash lead after a student transfered and covered both
Great intro Skit!!
i just started video editing for about 2 months now and its one heck of a ride.....It can be overwhelming sometimes but its people like you who give us reasons to keep going.Thanks so much
2:02 YOU TAKE THAT THE F BACK I DID NOT COME HERE TO GET ATTACKED.
What a relatable opening skit 🤣 Great video, these tips took me years to learn and lots of mistakes.
I hopped back into a half edited video after 10 months of nothing and subconsciously learnt about 3 of these tips, my highest recommendation is to go slow and don't burn out, keep it interesting and keep it going.
DUDE! thank you, i never even knew about the studio drivers!!! :O
Scenario 1 really spoke to me. I have never gone to schoool for editing, but have been saving up to audit some college classes for editing hopefully this fall or winter. But anyways, I've been the guy that changes his hat every few clips. Thanks for this! I think now I will be able to get better results and finish quicker.
I have found that I will always decide what song to use AFTER getting all my A-roll organized so that I can then know how to cut and adjust my B-roll. All my edits are either for YT or shorter social media videos, so I will cut to the beat most of the time.
Where can I buy a story hat?
REALLY NEEDED THIS I SWEAR
Thanks Chris! I love watching your videos. I was Just wondering when you were going to do another skit video like this!
I honestly thought #1 & #2 was part of the workflow, for most people, from the get go. Always made sense to me to finish what you started before moving on, and to stay organised so life was made easier down the track.
Those other tips are SUPER helpful tho!
Yea for me being a “lazy editor” on the 1st tip actually helps me get my videos done faster. It depends on the type of content you make though
Add 10 second then Play from the Beginning, that was exactly what i'm doing Right Now, Thanks A Lot Man, You Help me Out.
a lazy editor edits on a laptop; a pro editor edits on a multi-monitor desktop setup ;)
You are right, but don't forget the battery backup! Here in Panamá, we have relentless power outages and need the time to back up our desktop system!
@@ifound14u always have a UPS on any workstation just in case
Guess I’m lazy then 😂
The opening skit is the single most relatable thing I've ever seen
And... here is another subscriber!
Thank you. I needed this. This kind of tip worth more than any software tutorial. Cause this is rare.
I fully went into this episode thinking that it would make me feel like a lazy editor and what it actually did was make me realize I had really good habits.
I am doing the same on my Core i5 2nd generation PC with no graphics card for the 6 months.
I am glad to your video.
Scenario 2: Just fasten your external drives to the lid of your laptop with velcro strips to keep them from going anywhere when you're using them (black blends in nicely it seems). I regularly hitchhike with my laptop thousands of KM across Canada every summer and have had zero concerns about my external drives being knocked off any tables or any of that crap in the 3 or 4 years i've been doing that. It also just frees up a bit of room on whatever table/surface your working from :)
Did you really just make me laugh my ass off to an intro for video editing? Never thought I'd see the day
Thank you so much Chris!
Easy solution for storage is a 2 bay enclosure with a built in RAID controller. Slap 2 4TB SSD's (or HDD's if you don't need the speed) and set it to RAID 1. Golden. If you do a little looking you can find a 4 bay hdd enclosure with RAID 3 support and USB C which is ideal for a solo editor. Either of these are a very easy and hastle free solution. If you're doing client work you should even have a backup of your RAID array because if the unit fails you don't want to be sitting around doing nothing.
Excellent video all around Chris. Excellent advice here. Even on the items I knew your perspective helped reinforce some of those points. Great lighting.
Appreciate you, cheers.
Relinking the therapist had me in stitches! 😂😂😂
We’ve all been there!
Great advice Chris.
This video was more of a continuous and non ending rolling ad rather than a valuable use of time. I learned like one thing
I needed this! Thank you
Super valuable. Thanks, Chris!!
Yo that first part legit made me think - Has this dude been watching me?? 😂 I’m 2 videos deep and so glad I’ve come across your video. Although my first experience with editing (32 years old and haven’t touched a laptop in a few years 😅) it’s been extremely fun learning something new but also painfully slow haha. I’ll get better 💪 Shot for the content bro 🤙
thanks man, just did a test edit and realized my more narrative style is != to dynamic youtube style and that i still have a bit to learn for those techniques
Took me five years to realize and implement this.
Thank you for this insight
"It wouldn't be funny, if it wasn't true" damn what kind of therapist do you have my guy
Dang. Gotta wear the story hat until it's all there. That's what gets me every time with wedding films.
This is the best video man thanks for all the guidance I'm just starting with video editing.
Love the hat-switching visual analogy. It's a bad habit I sometimes fall back into. Especially when I want to nail the hook of the video. Except the hook should be made after everything else is made
I find it interesting that a lot of these tips are things that I naturally just developed over the course of years on TH-cam.
#1 - I've trended towards scripting videos and recording everything 1 one long clip from the start. Cutting out bloopers and silences essentially just left me with a story pass to add B roll and graphics to.
#2 - Transitioning from a Laptop to Desktop and working with multiple hard drives with limited capacities just naturally lends to learning better practices for asset management (I keep backups of my main stock footage folders and have a few dedicated archival drives
#3 - Upgrading my hardware for game development purposes and having an IT background(niche case I suppose) naturally lent itself towards this as I already understood PC specs and checking the software-hardware dynamics came naturally. Buying an NVIDIA GPU to leverage premiere and raytracing comes hand in hand
#4 - Can't speak to this one much as I'm still adapting to new formats. Admittedly, this can be a bit more natural if you grew up with social media and subconsciously imitate what you see already on set platforms
#5 - You never really get a "perfect" grasp on this. Admittedly, with enough videos made in a set style, you learn your tendencies. My old B-Roll heavy videos took around 1-2 hours per minute of video to create. Switching to having A roll literally improved efficiency by over 100%, allowing me to literally 3X my video release rate while still having time to do game development.
Great tips overall. Would have loved to have seen a video like this 8 years ago 🤣. If there's a bigger tip overall, I suppose the #0 tip to differentiate a Lazy vs a Pro editor, it's: a Pro Editor edits A LOT of videos 😅.
solid video, great and relatable advice! keep up the good work :)
That opening skit is very relatable!
This video just made me realise how much my workflow changed over the years
i really hope best buy and nvidia are paying you the most for this 😅. this video felt more like ad than video
Thank you so much. Helped a lot
This was actually hilarious 😂 Gonna grab some inspiration here for a future vid haha 😁
Thanks Peter!!
Thanks for this amazing video,
Have been editing videos for almost 4 years!
But doing it as you mentioned here in this video, It's a lot easier and faster. seen some of my friends doing it differently, they change their hats a lot!
@ 3:56 you triggered me. Thanks for that. I always have 3 sources on location shoots now. Primary project drive, backup project drive & the OG camera cards (unless I run out and need to format them) I typically hand off the backup to another member of the crew if possible. Also, use Post Haste from digital rebellion to organize your project folder structure. Life. Saver.
Thank you for the great advice!
Damn Chris this is one of the best videos I’ve ever watched. Thanks.
I feel attacked for being the one that saves his footage into the download folder. 😭
Nooooo🤣😩
SUCH great tips, thanks so much! Plus the comedy in this is fabulous xD
Awesome tips. Thank you.
Added to the Christmas list. Loved this video
This was extremely helpful, thanks!
That premier media offline was too funny
I'm so glad that I passed the first test! 🙌 to me, it was always the best way to get the "foundation" of the film done and then go back and get all the B roll, sound effects, and extras!
Thanks For Tips 👍🏻
Chris, the reason I don’t buy camera gear through Best Buy is despite them being a vendor for American Airlines, they don’t reward miles for buying cameras, drones, or computers. I only found this out after buying an Air 2S and not getting my miles. As a wildlife photographer and videographer, it’d be great if they’d have those miles so I could save money in my travels for content creation.
Great feedback!
Nailed it with the hook 🙏
This is a great channel! I only caught sight of you folks in recent times, but it’s now among my favourite channels...........
Okay, that Media Offline joke got me good. LOL.
This is the most relatable video I've ever seen
Amazingly accurate video!! Saving this and sharing everywhere!!
That skit made me watch the entire video, good job!
I’m actually wearing all of the hats as I render this video RIGHT NOW 😅😅 Thanks for this, we’re more efficient in 2022 🙌🏾
1. That 1st skit was comedy gold for any editor. ( Even da vinci editors) (I'm 50/50)
Dude, I totally never realized I do the method of add add add and press play..
Thank you for helping me realize this.
That first part had me rolling yo! Great video
Thanks bro ,good luck
Thanks! This was super helpful and the boost I needed!
Excellent video! Thanks for sharing.
thanks for the video man
this video is very valuable, thank u bro
I seriously needed to see this video. So much of what you say is spot on and should have been more obvious... but didn't process in my brain until I heard you say it. Your tips and advice are life changing and save so much time.
Thank you for this video 👏👏👏👏👏
Yo… the intro… I identify with this on a cellular level 😂
That intro is so hilarious but very relatable
im definetly the lazy video editor but defentitly the pro photo editor
Yeah that Bestbuy sponsored vid is pretty cool!
SUPER GREAT VID! Had a few laugh along the way, since that was me dropping my Drive and loosing all my work!
As always great relevant information that bring value. I'm constantly learning different and updated techniques from you and the few others that are awesome enough to share. thanks for the great video
Super helpful video! Thank you so much for this. 😊
Thanks for letting me realise that I do not have to change my hat every couple second. ❤️🔥
Some of these are very relatable! Great tips
Are those dediceated external SSD's are fast enough to able to edit off of them!? I feel like having M2 drives designated on the laptop for edit would be the best choice right? I am only asking because I was thinking about having giant external SSD drives to able to switch between Desktop/Laptop.