Video Editor
For each interview, we prepare separate sheets of scripts to ask more contextual questions per participant.
In the interview with Video Editors, we asked questions about their work environment and workflow specific to video editing.
Interview Script for Video Editor
For the first part of the session, we voice recorded the questions and answers about the daily workflow and function. Then, we moved to the video editor’s workstation to video record the environment and workflow.
Voice Recording of Video Editor’s Interview Session
Workflow Demo of Video Editor
Role
Video Editor
- Actually Audio/Video Editors
- Create the assets that are audible and visual for the site
- Largely works with recorded CNBC programming
Experience
17 & 10 years with CNBC
Day-to-day Work
CNBC programming – deals with U.S., Asia, and Europe
- Check the placeholders in Toolbelt
- Record actual feeds
- Mark ins and outs
- Transcode the video
- Drop the video in Toolbelt
- 2~5 minutes per clip to edit, depending on the amount of edits
Other projects
- Elements shot by digital crews
- Archive from Stratus
- Editors shooting videos with Digital and Production team in the studios
Using the request form
- Gets an email
- Find the placeholder if it isn’t specified in the form
- Call the requester
- Call Video Producers, if the requester doesn’t know how to create placeholders
- Mark it as adjusted once complete, and the requester gets an email
Communication
- Digital Producers
- Communicate with individual show producers of the show units for CNBC broadcast
- Determine what clips or sound bites or elements that they want for the Video Editors to cut as elements to go on CNBC.com, e.g. President Obama speaking
- Other teams that need videos
- Through request form
- International teams
- Through email
Prioritization
- Immediate clips to edit – in-person requests
- During the day, there are more people, so divide the work up
- 1 person for broadcast clips, 1 person for emails and other requests
- Broadcast clips are mostly sequential, unless there’s Breaking News
Often-used Content Type and Features in Toolbelt
- Video placeholders
- Drop in the edited videos
Pain Points
- Sometimes the thumbnail doesn’t attach itself automatically
- They create thumbnails with the same file names with the video’s
- Requests coming through Toolbelt sometimes don’t show up
- Due to missing or different date/time
- Takes long time to process a video in Toolbelt
- Loading wheel
Tools & Software
Video
- Stratus
- Browsing and searching over all assets
- Send selected videos to Edius
- Edius
- Editing application
- Send edited videos to render engine
- Render engine
- Drops the rendered video into Carbon Coder
- Carbon Coder
- Transcoder
- Drops the videos in the bin that the Video Editor can grab from
- All the video systems are connected to all across CNBC, for both digital and broadcast
Communication
- Toolbelt placeholders
- Request form for video editing
- Comes through email Inbox
- When it’s done, goes to that form and marks it as adjusted
- Email requests
- Mainly International teams
- Phone call & In-person for videos that require immediate attention
- e.g. Debate – Video Producer would sit together and yell out grabbing in and out
- Gchat
- To get quick requests
- Google Doc
- Keeping track of Bottom Line clips
- Information, title, ID number, and date
Work Behavior & Rules
- 3 monitors at the station – 1 for Toolbelt and email, 1 for main editing screen, 1 for video files and settings
- Insert the dissolve in the beginning of the clip, add 1 second of black at the end of the clip
- Video placeholder with ‘R’ means edit & ingest, and ‘D’ means ingest only
- There are 2 video clips created, lower resolution version denoted with ‘L’. Only ingest the regular, high-resolution version
Miscellaneous
- Fairly easy to use Toolbelt in the workflow
- Just open up the placeholder and drop the video in
- Some of the editors are integrated more into production, and publishing the clips, too – e.g. Bottom Line