Should You Edit a Boring Speaker Differently Than an Exciting Speaker?

Should You Edit a Boring Speaker Differently Than an Exciting Speaker?

Podcast participants who are exciting and energetic versus those who are more slow and boring — should you edit them differently?

My thinking: If the participant is slow, boring, and not energetic, their audio should be edited tighter to keep the pace flowing forward at a more reasonable pace. But if a participant is very energetic, then editing a bit more loosely would maintain their flow and avoid making it sound too fast.

For reference:

  • Editing “tighter” means removing more blank space, removing more unnecessary filler words, and potentially removing sections where the host repeats themselves or restates something.
  • Editing “looser” means leaving in more blank space, leaving in some/all filler words, and potentially leaving in sections where the host repeats themselves or restates something.

So, here’s the question for podcast editors: Does the energy level of a participant affect how tightly you edit their audio?

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2 Responses

  1. Chris – thank you for being so generous with your knowledge. I’ve been listing to you for over a year and I can’t count the number of times you’ve helped me master my indy podcast.

  2. Another trick that I found can help is to speed up the track by a small amount. Don’t increase the frequency so they sound like chipmunks, enough to tighten it up.

    If they speak in monotones, then a small amount of frequency shift at the appropriate times can help lift it.

    Using drop-ins of B-Roll can help as well. There’s nothing like a good short Sting to waken people up.

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Discussing Professional Podcast Production - Recording, Mixing, Editing, Mastering. Hosted by Chris Curran - podcast producer, audio engineer, founder of Podcast Engineering School and Fractal Recording.

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