YouTube smash 'Despacito' shot in one day, edited on Final Cut Pro X
"Despacito," the most viewed video on YouTube, has garnered over 4 billion views -- and was edited and produced using Final Cut Pro X.
The most viewed video in history was entirely shot in one long day in La Perla, according to an interview by FCP.co. After the rapid shoot starring former Miss Universe Zuleyka Rivera, it was edited with Final Cut Pro X at Elastic People, a studio in Miami.
To "stylize and pay-off" the song's title, that means "slowly" in English, the crew shot all the video in hi-speed. As a result, there were sufficient frames to play with different speed ramps during the edit, made simpler by Final Cut Pro X.
Editor Leo Arango claims that the "overall editing experience" is what makes Final Cut Pro X his solution of choice.
Elastic People standardized on Final Cut Pro X in 2015, according to studio founder Carlos Prez. All of the studio's work, including productions for Bacardi, Harley-Davidson, Nike, Pepsi, HBO, Sony, Columbia, ABC, and Toyota were churned out on the Apple-developed solution.
Just 6 months after "Despacito" was released it became the most streamed song in history, with 4.6 billion plays across all streaming services. The song reached the top spot on Billboard's Top 100 in the U.S. and stayed there for 16 weeks. On Sept. 26, "Despacito" was nominated for four Latin Grammy awards, including best music video.
The most viewed video in history was entirely shot in one long day in La Perla, according to an interview by FCP.co. After the rapid shoot starring former Miss Universe Zuleyka Rivera, it was edited with Final Cut Pro X at Elastic People, a studio in Miami.
To "stylize and pay-off" the song's title, that means "slowly" in English, the crew shot all the video in hi-speed. As a result, there were sufficient frames to play with different speed ramps during the edit, made simpler by Final Cut Pro X.
Editor Leo Arango claims that the "overall editing experience" is what makes Final Cut Pro X his solution of choice.
Elastic People standardized on Final Cut Pro X in 2015, according to studio founder Carlos Prez. All of the studio's work, including productions for Bacardi, Harley-Davidson, Nike, Pepsi, HBO, Sony, Columbia, ABC, and Toyota were churned out on the Apple-developed solution.
Just 6 months after "Despacito" was released it became the most streamed song in history, with 4.6 billion plays across all streaming services. The song reached the top spot on Billboard's Top 100 in the U.S. and stayed there for 16 weeks. On Sept. 26, "Despacito" was nominated for four Latin Grammy awards, including best music video.
Comments
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Music video edited on computer...next....
Personally, this is the first I've even heard of this song/video. Which is odd since I (or really my wife) watch enough TV to know the highlights of pop culture. 4 billion views is a staggering number.
So, what are the Pro’s using other than Final Cut?
Or, even Pro-consumers? I downloaded several ‘movie makers’ and the ones I tried were unusable...
I don’t own a Mac, but it looked like the way to go to create something without requiring classes on how to use the software.
I have a nephew who wanted to put together some High School baseball highlights for a College scholarship.
The artists are pissed about that, and there have been lawsuits in the past. YouTube pays a pittance in compensation...
Did the video editor possibly have ADHD? I don't think there was a shot longer than 2 seconds anywhere. That's some real artistry right there.
More realistically, it would take five seconds on a fast, low-latency connection per refresh and click. That means 600 years.
It has been 10 months since release.