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Auto ducking or auto mixing if you are lucky and the algorithm is good is about the only "easy" fix. The catch is that generally they are looking for the hottest signal and with two boomed mics that might get problematic, depending on the setup.
Now I don't know if the easiest fix has been mentioned but that would be to use the two tracks as a stereo pair. As long as you don't mix them to mono you won't get that comb filter effect and instead the slight delay will give you stereo placement.
That is what it is called in film also. Your time might be a little optimistic, but it does get faster as you go. It also depends on how much cleanup you do, and that is very project dependant. As a rule I would be removing extra "ums" and such, and on an audio only project taking out all those pauses to think cleaning up false starts and rethink moments.Occam's razor: import audio to timeline as discrete mono tracks, cut and crossfade when necessary.
We used to call it "checkerboaring" on a magazine show I worked on. Yes, it's manual... Yes, it's menial... But, you have total control over how and where it's done (ie when they are stepping on each other, coughs, uh-hu's, lip and tongue snapping, etc.). A half hour show (about 17 min) would take maybe 20 minutes give or take, including levels and EQ. You get the hang of it after awhile.
I would love to see a photo of Joshua's setup and then from Noiz2 (or any other contributor) on how to better position the mics
cheers
There is a "rule" that supposedly eliminates or at least vastly reduces the phaseyness. If I remember correctly it's three to one, I'm sure it can be googled. The idea is that the "off" mic is three times the distance to the subject as the "on" mic.
This!Occam's razor: import audio to timeline as discrete mono tracks, cut and crossfade when necessary.
We used to call it "checkerboaring" on a magazine show I worked on. Yes, it's manual... Yes, it's menial... But, you have total control over how and where it's done (ie when they are stepping on each other, coughs, uh-hu's, lip and tongue snapping, etc.). A half hour show (about 17 min) would take maybe 20 minutes give or take, including levels and EQ. You get the hang of it after awhile.
And, yes, we call it checkerboarding too - even if you’re recording a single boom to a single clip, checkerboarding across tracks gives you track-level EFX for each voice
As of now my solution has been to go through and key frame the two audio tracks so that when one person isn’t speaking, their mic is keyed out. This works, but it takes forever and considering the amount of videos I’m doing, there has to be another way.