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Salvaging Bad Audio

As a professional audio guy, I'm very aware of the need to capture clean and accurate audio along with clean and accurate video. When on a shoot, I follow accepted practices by using a separate directional microphone (or two), keeping the mic as close to the sound source as possible, and keeping the record levels as high as possible without clipping. But even with those precautions, noises occasionally creep into my recordings and must be reduced or eliminated. I'm also asked to edit and compress other people's footage, and often there's no telling what distracting noises or just ...

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