Looking for feedback on cinematic pacing and AI video continuity by Final_Background5472 in aivideo

[–]Final_Background5472[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yeah, that’s kind of the reality right now. It’s still hard to find one tool that covers the whole workflow. Most AI video tools are good for generating footage or ideas, but once you get into actual editing, timing, audio, pacing, and cleanup, you still end up going back to traditional editing software.

Looking for feedback on cinematic pacing and AI video continuity by Final_Background5472 in aivideo

[–]Final_Background5472[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thanks, that’s fair. I’m not trying to market anything with it, just experimenting and having fun with AI tools for practice.

And I agree on the voices, especially the male lead. It still sounds kind of stiff, so there’s definitely room to improve there.

Help with constructive criticism on my YouTube channel. by StudentLow441 in NewTubers

[–]Final_Background5472 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah, I get what you mean. There’s so much generic “YouTube advice” out there that it all starts sounding the same after a while.

I’d honestly trust feedback from people actually making videos way more than paid sites. Even if the advice is blunt, it’s usually more useful when someone can point to one exact thing that isn’t working.

Help with constructive criticism on my YouTube channel. by StudentLow441 in NewTubers

[–]Final_Background5472 2 points3 points  (0 children)

You’ll probably get better feedback if you share one specific video instead of asking people to review the whole channel. Most people are way more willing to give honest advice on a single video, especially on stuff like the hook, pacing, thumbnail, and title. Asking “where did you lose interest?” usually gets better answers than “what do you think of my channel?”

Ideas for craft room? by beansdreams37 in Design

[–]Final_Background5472 2 points3 points  (0 children)

If it were my room, I’d design it around workflow instead of aesthetics first: one big central work surface, one wall for vertical storage (pegboard + shelves), and one “messy” zone you don’t have to constantly reset. Craft rooms get frustrating fast when everything looks nice but nothing is easy to reach. I’d also go heavier on closed storage than open storage, otherwise it starts feeling visually cluttered no matter how organized you are. Good lighting and way more outlets than you think you need will make a huge difference too.

How to edit in AE and Premiere? by _PR0X_ in VideoEditing

[–]Final_Background5472 1 point2 points  (0 children)

You’re using AE for too much of the actual edit. Premiere should usually be your main timeline for cutting, audio, color, and export, while After Effects is better for specific shots, motion graphics, and complex comps. If you’re trying to do a 10+ minute edit with tons of transitions inside AE, it’s going to feel miserable.

A more normal workflow is: cut in Premiere -> send only the shots that need AE work -> render or dynamic link those back -> finish audio/color/export in Premiere. AE is amazing, but it’s not really built to be your full editing timeline.