·Use case

AI video editor for podcasters

Podcasters sit on hours of footage and minutes of time. FrameOS is the editing step that turns each recorded episode into a batch of short clips without a manual scrub through the timeline.

Built around the episode-to-clips workflow

Podcasting is the strongest fit for automated clipping: episodes are long, spoken, and full of self-contained moments. FrameOS finds those moments, ranks them by hook strength, and shows the score so you publish the strongest first.

Two-person and remote shows handled

Most podcasts are filmed wide or as a two-shot, and a center crop loses whoever leans out of frame. FrameOS tracks the active speaker so the crop follows the conversation between host and guest, keeping each person in shot when they talk — including remote interviews with separate feeds.

Captions that survive the feed

Podcast clips are watched on mute in the feed. Word-by-word captions, editable so you can fix a guest's name or a term before export, are burned in so they play correctly on every platform.

A repeatable weekly cadence

Record the episode, review a ranked shortlist before lunch, publish while the conversation is fresh. The bottleneck moves from manual editing to a few minutes of approval — the cadence that compounds reach over a season.

Podcaster workflow

  • Every episode becomes a batch of ranked clips.
  • Active-speaker reframing for two-person shows.
  • Editable, burned-in captions for sound-off feeds.
  • Review each clip before it publishes.

FAQ

Is FrameOS a good video editor for podcasters?

Yes. Podcasts are the strongest use case for automated clipping because episodes contain clear, self-contained moments that work as standalone short clips.

Do I need a video podcast?

FrameOS works from video sources, so reframing and on-screen captions have picture to work with. If your show is audio-only, record or add a video track first.

Will it handle a remote interview with two camera feeds?

Yes. Active-speaker tracking is designed for two-person and multi-speaker layouts, keeping the current talker framed as the conversation moves.

Related pages