"Plan C" Editor Reveals the Skill Every Creative Should Foster

How does one balance their wellbeing while also working 16 hours a day? How do you sift through 300 hours of documentary film footage in an efficient manner? What type of people skills and character traits are necessary if you are thinking of becoming an editor? In today’s episode, No Film School’s GG Hawkins, Yaro Altunin and Editor Meredith Rathiel Perry discuss: The film, Plan C, and what it was like to create such a timely documentary Working remotely from a 28 acre farm in Washington Why Meredith was excited to work on this particular documentary Feeling retraumatized over and over again when editing documentaries  What is was like to manage 300 hours of footage Cool tricks for keyboard shortcuts Why ripple deleting is so satisfying Helping directors through the birthing process of their films What really makes you a good editor Remembering to be excited about the things that are working Memorable Quotes “You’ve been working 16 hour days for a month and you’re like ‘what am I doing with my life, I am so tired.’” [16:02] “With docs you are shaping the story whereas a narrative has a script.” [29:18] “I am a really visual screenwriter. I can see what I’m writing.” [30:40] Resources: Plan C Find No Film School everywhere: On the Web https://nofilmschool.com/ Facebook  https://www.facebook.com/nofilmschool Twitter  https://twitter.com/nofilmschool YouTube  https://www.youtube.com/user/nofilmschool Instagram https://www.instagram.com/nofilmschool Send us an email with questions or feedback: podcast@nofilmschool.com! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Om Podcasten

A podcast about how to build a career in filmmaking. No Film School shares the latest opportunities and trends for anyone working in film and TV. We break news on cameras, lighting, and apps. We interview leaders in screenwriting, directing, cinematography, editing, and producing. And we answer your questions! We are dedicated to sharing knowledge with filmmakers around the globe, “no film school” required.