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Ghosts S02e16 Ffmpeg File

While the episode focuses on Isaac Higgintoot’s desperate attempt to finish his biography (and Trevor trying to day-trade crypto from the 90s), the real unsung hero of this episode isn’t a Revolutionary War ghost. It’s the open-source multimedia framework running on every editing bay at CBS Studios.

Specifically, the show uses a lot of "particle work"—the ethereal shimmer when a ghost walks through a wall. If you use a standard H.264 encoder, those particles turn into blocky macroblocks. The show’s lead colorist (who wishes to remain anonymous but confirmed this on a VFX forum) runs a custom ffmpeg script for every episode. ghosts s02e16 ffmpeg

It’s a command line that just works. Have you used ffmpeg to fix a bad video file? Or do you just want to discuss why Isaac’s book isn’t historically accurate? Drop a comment below. We promise not to spectral-wail at you. While the episode focuses on Isaac Higgintoot’s desperate

In After Effects, this takes 30 seconds. But when you have 47 shots in an 22-minute episode, you don’t use After Effects. You use ffmpeg in a batch script. If you use a standard H

The audio team extracted the 5.1 surround track, used ffmpeg to convert the 48kHz sample rate to 96kHz (to slow it down without pitching Mickey Rooney), and then used the atempo filter to speed it back up.

The actual command used for that shot? A beautiful piece of ffmpeg -fu:

From a narrative perspective, it’s a joke about productivity. From a post-production perspective, it’s a nightmare of .

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