AI Filmmaking Masterclass: Turn Ideas into Cinematic Videos | Chester Sky | Skillshare
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AI Filmmaking Masterclass: Turn Ideas into Cinematic Videos

teacher avatar Chester Sky, Learning Academy

Watch this class and thousands more

Get unlimited access to every class
Taught by industry leaders & working professionals
Topics include illustration, design, photography, and more

Watch this class and thousands more

Get unlimited access to every class
Taught by industry leaders & working professionals
Topics include illustration, design, photography, and more

Lessons in This Class

    • 1.

      Course Trailer

      1:39

    • 2.

      Case Study Easter Morning

      5:34

    • 3.

      Creating AI Prompts

      5:40

    • 4.

      Storyboarding with PureRef

      4:21

    • 5.

      Creating Images

      10:01

    • 6.

      Image To Video

      3:23

    • 7.

      Reference Image To Video

      2:42

    • 8.

      Text To Video

      3:43

    • 9.

      Luma

      6:38

    • 10.

      Creating Mood Boards With Luma

      4:03

    • 11.

      Adobe Firefly

      5:26

    • 12.

      Fish Audio Text To Voice

      7:16

    • 13.

      Adobe Premiere Basics

      14:55

    • 14.

      Generating Subtitles With AI

      8:19

    • 15.

      Exporting Video

      0:46

    • 16.

      Case Study

      5:27

    • 17.

      Royalty Free Music

      1:37

    • 18.

      Conclusion

      2:18

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About This Class

AI Filmmaking: Create Stunning Films with Artificial Intelligence

Lights, Camera… AI!

Imagine being able to create cinematic-quality films without expensive cameras, a huge production crew, or years of technical training. Artificial Intelligence is revolutionizing the world of filmmaking, and this course will teach you how to harness its power to bring your creative vision to life!

Whether you're an aspiring filmmaker, content creator, or simply curious about the future of AI-driven media, this course is your ultimate guide to AI-powered filmmaking—from script to screen.

What You’ll Learn

  • Master AI storytelling – Learn how to craft compelling narratives using ChatGPT and AI-generated prompts.

  • Create breathtaking visuals – Turn text into stunning images and videos with Haluo AI, Adobe Firefly, and Luma.

  • AI-powered voiceovers & royalty free music – Generate realistic voices with Fish Audio

  • Seamless editing with AI – Enhance your workflow with AI tools in Premiere Pro, from subtitles to final export.

  • Case studies & hands-on projects – Follow along with real-world AI film projects and even learn AI lip-synching techniques.

Why This Course?

  • Cutting-edge AI tools – Get hands-on experience with the latest AI-driven filmmaking platforms.

  • Practical, real-world projects – No fluff! You'll create actual AI-generated videos step by step.

  • For all skill levels – Whether you're a beginner or an experienced creator, this course will level up your filmmaking game.

  • The future is now – AI is disrupting the film industry. Stay ahead of the curve and start creating AI-generated films today!

Start making AI-powered films today

Meet Your Teacher

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Chester Sky

Learning Academy

Teacher

Producer and Composer

Official Website: http://chestersky.com

Facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/realchestersky/

Twitter page: https://twitter.com/realchestersky

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/iamchestersky/

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Transcripts

1. Course Trailer: Imagine creating visually stunning videos with just a few mouse clicks. No cameras, no advanced technical skills needed. But with AI technology, now you can. In this course, we'll show you the step by step how to bring your ideas to life, creating video with artificial intelligence. You'll learn how to create scripts effortlessly with AI. You'll learn the camera angles, the storyboard, the whole 9 yards. You'll learn how to generate images and visuals in seconds. You'll create full videos with air automation where you'll learn how to create videos from text prompts, using a subject reference so you can have consistent looking characters throughout your videos, and also from images, so you can turn any image into a video. You'll learn how to create camera movements and tips and tricks to polish up your AI videos. You'll learn how to add lifelike voice narration, where any voice can be created to read out your script. You'll learn how to generate subtitles instantly for any audience and so much more. You don't have any experience, it doesn't matter. This course will give you all the tools you need to create professional AI generated films from start to finish. By the end of this course, you'll have everything you need to turn your ideas into reality. It's fast, fun, easy, and you're going to get incredible looking videos. Ready to make your first AI powered video? Come on in and join the creating video with AI Master Class. 2. Case Study Easter Morning: To start this course off, I'd like to show you a little K study. This is a video project I made in AI, and it's using all the tools that we're going to be using in this course. So this is a nice way to essentially give us a little send off, and you'll see kind of the kind of video that can be created in AI, we'll walk through its some of its pros and some of its cons. And then for the rest of the course, you'll essentially learn how to make something like this. So this is the little video short film Easter Monday. Enjoy. Wow. M. Okay, so that was Easter morning. Maybe that was a little surprise to you how that was going to end. But yeah, all of this video footage that you saw here, all of this is created in AI. There's not a single character or anything in that that was actually created by a human. Some of the pros is that you'll notice the character is actually the same character throughout the film. That sounds obvious to you, but for people who've been creating AI for a while, it's actually quite new that you're able to have a consistent character throughout the entire film. So I mean, there's slight deviations from shot to shot, but you can still tell it's the same human overall. Um, you're able to create moving creatures like a rabbit, something like that. That AI does quite well. The more common the object is, the easier it is for AI to make. On the other hand, you'll notice when we get to the egg, the egg looks pretty different in every shot. And that's because an egg is, I guess, at least an evil monster egg is not a common thing that AI has to do. So you'll notice the shape changes quite often, the size, the texture, all of that, all that is a lot more difficult to do. Um, I don't think that'll be like that for the future for a long time. I think that's just probably the current iteration. But yeah, so you'll learn to make essentially anything that you see in this video quite easily. This won't be a difficult video to make for you. I know it's probably looks like a lot there, but we'll cover essentially everything you need to know to make this video in this course. So yeah, I guess let's get into it, and let's start making videos with artificial intelligence. 3. Creating AI Prompts: In this video, we're going to learn about creating the script that we're going to be using for the prompts. And what I mean by that is we need to have prompts for the images to make the video. And hatTPT does a really good job of coming up with descriptions that we can then make videos about. So in this case, if you don't know what JAGBT is, it's a AI software, large language model. You can reach it at this website here, chapt.com. I recommend you login, make an account. It's free to use a free account. And essentially, you can ask it whatever it you want, and it'll come up with an AI generated answer. And it's very, very good for coming up with storyboards or at least the general outline of stories that you want. In this case, my story that I'm going to have is going to be an Easter story. Be an Easter story, and it's going to be an Easter horror movie. So the premise is going to be there's a child who discovers Easter bunny, finds an Easter egg, and the egg turns out to be some kind of dangerous thing. It's no longer a safe thing to get discovered. So I'm going to have Chat TVT come up with our story or more specifically, come up with the prompts that can be used in the story. So Um, you can write off, of course, whatever scripts you want for your story, but I'm just going to give you a simple example, and then you can use this however you like. So, um, come up with a short story. Script about a boy who finds Easter bunny in his house. Easter Bunny leaves an egg, and the egg turns out to be a monster. So let's see what Cha ChiBT comes up with here. So we have some general idea. Here's our character. Kid called Jackson. He's looking around. He finds a bunny. The bunny places an egg. It looks like the bunny talks in this particular scripts. Finds the egg. The egg's got some kind of creepy monster. This goes on for a while. Anyway, you get the gist. AI has come up. The script. Now for the most important part, though, is we need to have prompts to create the imagery that's going to be used in creating the video. I'm assuming you're happier with the script, whatever that may be. I don't really care in my case, but for you, you spent a little more time coming up with that. And in this case, I'm going to specify a few things here. I'm going to ask ChihPT write me, let's say, Uh, 15 prompts. You're probably gonna want a lot more than this. But just for example, here, prompts for images to accompany this story. And we want it to be extremely detailed about what the character looks like. Especially the facial expressions, the clothes, the hair, setting for every prompt. That's important here. And we want it to be consistent. So because what we're going to do in a ilabte here is we're going to take the prompts that we generated from Cha GBT. We're going to feed it into NAI. And every single prompt, DA is going to look at that prompt and then create an image out of it. And if you have differences between your descriptions, you can get very different images generated. So we need to be very careful in how our description is. So let's see what it comes up here, but you'll see what I mean in a second. In this case, we have a character description of the child. It says it's a 10-year-old boy, Brown, messy hair. Got some freckles. Well, let's describe him to clothing. That's good. That's fine. So that's good. We have a character description, and we have a setting. That's kind of what we want. We want to have both of those things. It's got a description of the bunny. That's good. That's exactly what we want. We have a nice fluffy bunny, so AI is going to know what to create for that. Um, And then, yeah, so every scene, we have a nice little description of what the character looks like, what the image is going to look like, and so on. And we can now take these images and move on to our next part, which is going to be creating imagery from our story. 4. Storyboarding with PureRef: So we've created our script. Now the next thing to do is the storyboarding, and storyboarding is really important because it allows you to visually map out how your film is going to look. It's like a comic strip where you can see one panel of the next panel and you can say, Okay, it's going from this event to this event. And since it's a film, you can visually see it before we've created the video. So there's a useful software for storyboarding. I like to use this one called PureRef. You can download it at purrep.com, and it allows you to organize all of your images. And it's actually a pay you want software. So if you go to the download page, you can download it for whatever platform you're using, and then you can actually download it for whatever amount, whatever you want to pay. So let's take a look at this software. This is what it looks like when it opens up. It's very minimalistic in a good way. And it says exactly what it wants you to do. It wants you to drag and drop some images in. So let's do that. Here's a bunch of images. Let's presume I've generated these images from my AI image creating software, or I downloaded them as inspiration. It's up to you from whether you're going to use these exact clips or whether you're just downloading them from somewhere else. But once you have your clip, you can just drag the image in apure ref, and then I can scroll with my mouse to zoom out. Scuming in scrolling out with my mouse, skull wheel. And then I can do the same thing. So I can just essentially drag and drop a bunch of images into my scene. Let's make this full screen here. I can reposition them. I can select multiple of them and move them around. It's very convenient and simple to use, very intuitive. And then I can add notes. For example, I'm going to say this is scene one. And here's scene two. Man, discovered man edits his video. Well, maybe I want to have some dialogue here. Um, I can't believe how good this is looking. So maybe I'll have this and maybe I want to rearrange these things. It's very easy to move those things around like that. I can also go and draw things. For example, in this draw section, you have little options for colors, and I can say, Okay, scene one goes to scene two. I want to focus on this, zoom in on here. Um, character does something, blah, blah, blah. Um, yeah, potentially by right clicking, you can get access to the notes and the draw. You can copy and paste things. For example, I got to exit out of this first. There you go. So I could copy this and I could paste it. It's essentially the easiest way to organize and lay out your events that you probably ever encounter. Yeah, it's just a very handy software to use. So once you've got your script, you can lay out all of your images, put whatever notes you want. Maybe you want to put the dialogue. You can even put the camera directions. For example, camera dolly grooves forward. Or whatever it is that you want the camera shot to be doing later on. We're actually going to be covering that later on and how to have the camera movement in the AI video. So it's worth it putting those descriptions here if you can be bothered to do that. The more you map it out, the more it'll look exactly the way you want it to later. The nice thing is that specifically with AI video, is that these storyboards, they're not just references to use. If you want, you can actually re use this exact image as a frame in the video, but we will get to that later on. Um, but it's good to be able to lay out how your events are moving from one event to the next and to visually see and map it out in your storyboard. So that's really all I want to talk about for Pure ref, because it's so intuitive. It really doesn't require much explanation. It's just a great handy tool for organizing your events. 5. Creating Images: In the last video, we created the prompts to be used. Now we're going to create our storyboard. We're going to create the imagery to be used in our video. So I'm going to copy this script here. So this prompt, I'm going to take it, I'm going to copy it. And then I'm going to go to our website to create our imagery. Now, there are many choices to use. You don't have to use this software to create the imagery. You can use lots of them. There's, for example, Adobe Firefly. That's a great one. That is a paid one. Now it used to be free, but no longer free. There's stable diffusion, which is free, and I actually have an entire course that shows you how to use stable diffusion. Now that is slightly beyond the scope of this course, but I do recommend stable diffusion. It is a very good software, and it's free, and you can make unlimited number of imagery. In this case, since we're going to be making video with the software anyways, we may as well also use it to create the imagery with it. So this is the software that I'm going to use for this particular aspect. This is Halo AI. If you just Google that, you'll find the software. And specifically, in this video, we're going to focus on creating the storyboard imagery. So I'm going to go and create image. And here we have our image creation. And I'm going to paste the prompt that we generated earlier. In this case, we have our description of the character. We have our description of what they look like, all that sort of stuff. We have the aspect ratio, which is going to be important because we want to have it. Do you want it to be like a short for social media or do you want it for video? So you're going to want to specify that? And then you can say, Okay, great. And now it's generating images. You can decide how many images you want it to generate. You can also have suggestions here. Sometimes this is useful. I'm not going to use it for that in this particular case. And now we can see it's generating some images here. This will take a little bit of time. This is often not the most ideal software used for creating imagery just because it's not as fast as some of the other ones. For example, I find stable diffusion is probably faster. Firefly is better. Firefly is paid, that's all. And we have our images that have been created. If we want to take a look at them, let's take a look here. We can see what's being produced. We have our prompt here, and this is four images in this case, that is created. Did a very good job. This looks very realistic to me. The resolution is fantastic. It looks cinematic as well. Um, now, assuming we were happy with this, let's say I liked this particular image, I can check out this option here, and I can say, Hey, I could either make this a subject reference, which is actually a great idea. Let's do that. Let's make this a subject reference and say, confirm, Yeah, I like this kid. This kid is perfect. Alright, um, we'll come so now we have our character. We can actually use this guy over and over again. So instead of having to use this description in all of our prompts, we now can just say, Hey, we want to use this character reference to create our footage run. Um, so let's take a look at that now. So I'm going to come out of that. And now we're in the subject reference tab. It automatically put us into that. But if you're not in there, you can just shift over to that tab. And now if we were to paste the exact same information, our prompt again, we wouldn't even need to describe all of this. We don't need to have a description of what he looks like anymore if we already have our description. So I could just take that out completely. The hallway is important to have. You still need a description of the setting. So now if we wanted to create a video from this, since we're already on this tab, we have our description of the character. We could now make this into our video. So you could just do it that way, and it will now go about generating the video for you. Should. You can see loading down here. Now, alternatively, though, if we were to click onto one of these images here, and I want to animate it here, I could say image to video and select that option. And that will also use that exact frame that we use. So that will probably be the starting frame. That's usually what it is. Um and then you can use that as well. You can also decide how you want the camera to move. So if you wanted to, for example, you can have lots of different options of how you want to move the camera in the video footage. For example, here, this is moving left, this is moving right. Some of these better ones here, you can see the cameras moving upwards, moving downwards, zooming in, zooming out. You want some camera shake, some movement, where you want the camera to be following the character from behind. You want the character to be static, but the rest of the environment to be moving. That's under the free selection. There's also cinematic shots where you can see the camera slowly moving around the character. In this case, it's moving upwards from the character, cameras moving left around, circling around. You can see there's lots of good options here. The fact that you can have complete control over the way you want your shot to look is really quite remarkable. Let's use the debut one. I like the debut one. That's pretty good. And then I'll say, Okay, go to create that. That's good. So now it is loading. Now, this is going to take a little while. It does take some time to load. And of course, it also depends on the number of credits that you have. So you do buy credits to use the software. This particular software is not a free software, but you do get credits, and if you're careful in how you use your credits, you can still create plenty of video footage in a relatively cheaper amount of time compared to going around and hiring a whole camera crew and spending your whole day doing this. You could create all these videos in quite a short amount of time. So, yeah, that's kind of the main things is we're able to create our images. If you were to do the text to video, we could just have our description here where we have our character. You can choose what kind of camera movement you want it to be, whether you want it to move in one way or the other way. In order to keep the videos consistent, we always have a description of what the character looks like. That's the most important part. Otherwise, your character will change. Or alternatively, if you're using the subject reference, since you can upload any image of any character you want, you don't even have to describe the character anymore what they look like. It will use that existing image that you uploaded, and then you can have the movement. Now, we have discussed how to create the video part. But if you are using a subject reference, um The subject reference is fine because you can describe exactly how you want the character to move in the scene. In this case, we have the character moving forward, following us for whatever reason. If you are using the image, though, and you're having an image being used to create a video, you are a little more limited because you can't describe, for example, so if we were to let's say, grab this one or something, we wanted to create that into a video. You don't really get to choose the prompt the same way. You get to describe this, but this is really intended for the camera angle. You can use it for description, but it's not always going to listen to it. This is really meant to be how you want the camera to be using it. You don't really get as much choice over describing how the scene is going to look it's using this image as the look. So I think that's kind of the main things I wanted to cover here. If you were to use, for example, a image to video, though, for example, you just want to use this image to video, you can easily just drag and drop all of the images that you generated earlier in your script. For example, I have a picture that I just have in my folder here. I can just drag a photo into into this tab. So we're in an image to video tap, I can just drag a photo into it, and then we can use that photo right away as the reference. So here we have we have our two video shots now. We have a kid walking around. We have two different versions where a kid looking in the hallways looking around. One of these we created directly with the scripts. One of these we created just using an image prompt to create that. 6. Image To Video: So we have a bunch of images that we can now use to create our video. In this case, I have a bunch of images here. You'll probably have 20 or so images, and now we can use these to create the video footage. So earlier we were using image generation. Now we're going to go to create video. And there's a few options here. In this case, we want to use the image to video reference, and I'm going to take the image, and I'm just going to drag it in. It's very easy. Now we have our image here. And then what this is going to do is it's going to create a video based on this particular image that we uploaded. And then you get to choose the camera how you want the camera to look here. So I can select this option here, insert camera movement at multiple points. And here you can decide, how do I want the camera to be moving? Do I want it to be panning? Do I want it to be coming in, coming out? Do I want to be looking up at the character? Looking upwards, zooming in, camera shake, camera following the character. The character is not moving, but the rest of the environment is. That's under the free selection. Under the cinematic shots, you can have the camera moving around the character, looking downwards at the character rotating around them, et cetera. So yeah, lots of very cool cinematic shots that we can have in this case, I might pick this one. And we can see it has added the camera shot. In this case, I don't want to have two of them, I only want the cinematic shot, so I'm just going to have that. And then you decide how many images you want, and then you can select the credits how many credit to create the submit button. And that's going to create your video, and now it's in a queue. It's going to be generating. In this case, I've actually already created this shot earlier, and that's what this one is here. It starts off with the character moving around, looking around. So essentially, the image was the first frame of the shot, and then it's just moving around here. And then if you're happy with it, you can download it. Essentially, that's the gist for using an image to creating a video. So you could be doing this for every single shot of your video. Essentially, you take images. You'll have a whole bunch of these images. You'll drag them in one by one into the image to video, choose how you want the camera to move around it, and then you generate it, and it just creates it. And then you can download it right afterwards. It's actually quite quick compared to any other system that you could think of where you're instantly churning out images to videos. You don't have to spend time setting up a whole scene in real life. You can just have this tool do it for you. So that is how you can use the image to video feature of Halo AI. 7. Reference Image To Video: So we've covered how to do the image to video, and that's the fastest way is to simply have all of your images one by one, grabbing all of these, dragging and dropping and dragging and dropping. That's the fastest way for sure. Now, what happens if you want to use a consistent character? There's a way to always use the same character, and then you can just put them into different scenarios. You don't even have to have an image generated. And the way to do that is to either have a photo that you want to upload, you go to subject reference and you can upload a photo. So what I've done here is I have this character who is a reference character. Uh, now, you can normally this isn't selected. You can just add a reference character. You can select it and just upload whatever photo you want. Or alternatively, in my case, since I have these characters already generated, I can click into one of these photos. And let's say I like one of these guys. Let's say I like this fella. Um, this kind of goofy looking fellow. So I can select one of these objects here, which is say subject reference. It looks. Make sure there's a human in there. At this current time, it only works if you have humans. Maybe in the future, it'll be different. And now you have this is exact same interface as this thing here. It's the same thing. And then you don't actually have to describe what the character looks like anymore. I don't have to say, Okay, he's wearing a green hoodie and he's got short brown hair or anything. It will always use this same character now. And so now I can say, for example, let's say Jackson walks into the kitchen. Now, we haven't even described what Jackson looks like, and this task will now be created. And so I let this run for a few minutes. It's finished working. And now we can see we have our character. He's the same one, wearing green hoodie, and he's now in the kitchen. And we didn't have to describe how we looked like because we had our character reference already done. But, yeah, that's essential essentially the gist of it. You can have your character reference, and you can say, put them in different scenarios that you don't have to describe what your character looks like anymore because the reference will be used. 8. Text To Video: Now, the final one is text to video, and I've saved this last because it's really useful for a different reason. If I were to directly just try to stick the prompt in and generate, it probably would be fine. But it might not be. You don't know. The thing is, it takes a while to generate the videos from scratch. And if you have a reference, at least you know what the clip will look like, even if it doesn't behave the way you expect it to. You know that the first scene is going to look something like your character because you're using a subject reference. So the subject reference is a way to guarantee that you have a character, the way it looks. The image reference is a way to guarantee that at least you have the frame that you're looking for in the shot. The text of the video is a little more random in that you don't know how it's going to look until the video comes out. You don't know what the subjic reference is going to look like. You don't know what any of the frames are going to look like. So it is faster in that you don't have to make any, I think, first, but it's also more variation in the result that you receive. However, if you are trying to get motion of a specific action happening, let's say, for example, we wanted Jackson to pull an apple out of his pocket. Or anything specific that involves movement. For example, he comes into the frame, he leaves the frame. You're not going to be able to do that with the image because it only knows what's currently in the frame. We're not able to really give the description the same way. This is just for camera movement, really. And the subject reference the subject reference is better in that you can still describe how your character is going to move. But let's say you wanted to have multiple characters. Maybe Jackson pulls an apple out of pocket, then his mother comes into the room. The thing is you can only have one subject reference at this current time, so it's not going to work so well. So this allows you to have multiple characters. We can then we have a description of what Jackson looks like. I can have a description of what his mother looks like and so on. So the text of the video is a great way to generate well, this is the original prompt that we had. So we could create the text from the video straight up like this. But as you can see here in our prompts, it's not always even a live action. In this case, this one generated a cartoon. This one does look the way we expect it to. But you can see there is a lot more variation in that. You have to be more specific in how you're describing the scene. So yeah, we've covered, essentially the main tools that are involved in Halo AI. There's the image to video. We've covered subject reference. We cover text to video, and these are the main techniques of how to create the video using AI, using arguably the fastest video AI software that I currently know of. Are lots of ones out there, but they're a lot slower to generate content quickly. And the thing is this particular software allows you to generate a few of them in a queue at once, and it doesn't take too long. It allows you to control the camera movement. It allows you to have subject references, images to video. It gives you lots of control over how everything's done. So yeah, you now know how to generate AI video. 9. Luma: In this video, we're going to talk about Luma, also known as a dream machine, but specifically at this URL, you can get to it. And this is another AI video making tool. This is another cutting edge software. And if you go to that URL, you can get to this site. And essentially, Luma is very similar to Halaway AI in that you can create images and video very easily. If you go to the create create some video section or create image section, and you type in what you want to see. So, for example, let's say I want to see a boy playing with an Easter egg. And then you can ask for suggestions, for example, what kind of shot do I want to have? Maybe establishing shot, and I'll have a Birds Eye View is kind of cool. Let's try Birds Eye View. Over here, you can describe what kind of format you want the output to be in. This is going to be your regular video widescreen video, but if you want it to be for social media, you might pick one of these other options. This is for images for video, over here. Um you can choose how long you want it to be. That's kind of a nice feature. You actually get to specify the length. I don't know why you'd want lower resolution. They give you some different models here. These keep adding new models, so I wouldn't worry too much about that. The default or of the newest the latest and greatest. There's a keyframe option, which is kind of cool. The keyframe option allows you to choose what you want either the starting image or the ending image to be. So for example, if I had a reference image, I could just use that image, and then that would be our beginning or ending. Um, this is currently only for images, but maybe it'll be for video later where you upload a reference image. For example, I'd stick in our boy, and then it will make a reference video that's using this as a reference. Modifies images as well. But it's essentially similar. Yeah. So there's a few things here we can if I use we'll just use the describe for the first shot. So okay, I'm going to create that and it'll take a little while to load that up. I find it's actually a little bit slow compared to Halo, but it's still not bad. Let's try a keyframe as well. So I'll have a start K frame, we'll load in our keyframe here. A boy. A boy playing a Esterig. And we will say, we want that to be the key frame. Um, what else do we want? Yeah, we want, perhaps some camera angles. Let's try wide angle. Oh, what about Drone Shot? Let's do one shot. Only problem with drone shot is these are conflicting information Droneshots usually, flying in the air, but this looks like it's facing the character. So maybe the drone would be countering the image. So I don't think I'd be able to do this reference image with the drone shot. So sometimes you're having conflicting information, and the A is probably going to ignore either this or you're probably going to ignore this. It's probably going to use the reference image. Okay, let's try a different camera shot. Let's try Um ground level. So what we should see at the end of the day is this image being the beginning. So now we have that, and that's loading up. That'll probably take a minute or so we can see when we had the original prompt that we typed in, this is the Who sorry, this is the output that we created. Um, so we have a boy playing with her Easter egg. It's kind of fun. You'll notice that it has taken a lot of creative liberties in it. Who knows what the boy is going to look like ahead of time? Who knows what the eggs are going to look like, what setting is going to be like? We didn't specify any of that, so the AI had to play around with a lot of suggestions and trying to figure out what to do. You can modify it. For example, you want to make some changes, and it will generate a new video and essentially use this as the original input. It's an extend video option. You're saying, right, I want it to be longer. But that's essentially very similar to the keyframe. It's just saying you're using this as your starting image. You probably want to change the ending image, but that's all that is. Upscale saying you can make it up to four k instead of 1080. That's kind of a nice feature. This is a Beta feature, but you can have audio added. Yeah, that's essentially the main gist of it, and then you download your clip when you're done with Okay, so the video has finished processing. We can now click our video and see how it looks. We can see it did use the initial image as the keyframe, the first keyframe image. So that's using that as a starting point. And then it's trying to imagine what happened in the rest of the scene. Um, yeah, it looks like it did a pretty good job, to be fair. The video looks pretty realistic. Yeah, that's Luma, Halo AI. So if you're interested in that, check out this software. It's a pay for credit software, so you do have to have a paid subscription for it. But it is a very good tool. So consider that. 10. Creating Mood Boards With Luma: Uma also offers a feature which provides you with suggestions. So essentially, you click this icon over there, and this gives you the new board section. And here, it's giving you a little idea of what this could be. For ours, let's say, a boy discovering these digs. And you generally will just let it create the images in the beginning, but it does give you options that we had earlier. And if we were to select this, it's going to take a little while to load. But what it will do is it will come up with themes or possible, um, ideas of how your shot could look later on. So this is more on the image creation, but you can then use these images as videos later. You can drag those in as keyframes, as we discussed. But essentially, it's saying, Okay, here are some ways that we could go about creating your idea that we just described here. You'd say, Alright, well, that was not bad. That's okay. Rainstorm. That wasn't too far off. What else can you come up with here? This drain storm section gives you a few more ideas to say, Okay, here's some possibilities. Um, I like this magical egg look. This is a nice little touch. Let's try that one. So now it's giving you a more detailed suggestion. It's essentially come up with a prompt suggestion that you could use. And we can click that again. And what it's doing is it's going to give you this whole list of images now, and it's just going to keep going as long as you want it to come up with more suggestions here. So now it's saying, Alright, instead of just a boy discovering an Easter egg, now we're using some imagery descriptions. So it's saying, right, we want to have a specific atmosphere, magical atmosphere, whatever that thinks. It is. In this case, it involves sparkles and ethereal light. And then once you have these, of course, you can convert those into videos. That's one way to do it. If you want this to be your reference image, it's always a nice little way to use this. You can say, right, I want to have this boy here. Maybe instead of a tree, swap out the tree with a house. See how smart it is. I'm not entirely sure how this is going to pan out, but we will see how this looks. Is it smart enough to identify that? Sometimes it's really good at it, sometimes it's really bad at it. So it did do that. It actually swapped out the tree, and it kept the essential general format of the image. We still have a boy etherealte in sparkles. It's done that quite well. And then, let's say we wanted to make this into your video, you would just click that, more like this. Essentially, we've kind of done that already, but you can have it self generate more images that are similar to. Um, so once you've done that, yeah, well, let that load. Here we go. As you can see, this didn't take that long to generate these images either. This is quite a quick process. But then once you're done, you have all of these images to refer to, and you can see the prompts that we use. It's all laid out and nice easy to view and go back over, and all of this is very intuitive. So yeah, that's the board section of Luma. It's very handy. And then when you found one that you want, you can just say, you want to make a video out of that. And it'll use that as the first frame, or you're going to have it as the last frame, and then you can add the camera directions, which we covered earlier. So that's another handy feature that Luma offers. O 11. Adobe Firefly: And now up is Adobe Firefly. This is another tool for creating AI video. This is brand new. Adobe just released the ability to showcase creating video for AI. This just came out, so this is the latest and greatest. This is actually still in Beta, but it works now. So to get to this, you can go to the URL firefly.adobe.com. This is, once again, a credit based usage. But it's got lots of tools, and they are adobe products. So, you know, this is kind of as good as it gets. So you have the ability to generate text to image. You have the ability to text to video. You can create three D shapes, translate videos. You can upload an image, and it'll create a video out of the image. You can also translate audio into other languages. I recommend if you do use Adobe, check out the gallery because the gallery shows you what other users have made. So for example, on this one, you can see that it will load up the image and show you the prompt that was used and all of the effects that were applied to it. So it's definitely worth checking out the gallery because you can see what other users have been doing. For example, this one shows you this text prompt was used. And then if you want it, because this was created directly in Adobe, you could actually click the View and you could create it yourself. So it's very easy to generate content this way. In terms of the image creation, this is a text to image option. I'll show you how to get that here. It's essentially just saying, I want to create the text to image. And then you can start creating an image where you decide what sort of picture size you want it to be. You can choose whether you want it to be art or a photo. You can upload a reference image if you choose. For example, if I wanted it to be like my boy with an Easter egg, I could upload a boy with an Easter egg. Visual intensity makes it more colorful and vibrant and makes it look more appealing. Then there's tons of effects here. Earlier, well, I guess I'll just go to one of those gallery clips again. So for example, if we had this one, you can see under the effects, these are effects that have been applied. It applied these effects here. So if you were to load one of these things, it will add that effect to it, and it will allow you to add more. So you can choose lots of effects. For example, you could say, I want the lighting to be like this or the color to be like that. I want the lighting to be like this. I want the camera and gold to be from this angle. There's so many choices. The best way to learn is just to play around. In terms of video, though, this is the latest and greatest thing that just came out is the video section here. It's essentially the same idea as the way you create images where you choose your size of the video to come out. You choose the camera angle that you want it to be. Sorry, the shot size, and then the camera angle here. Sample pick something like that. You can choose what kind of motion do you want it to be. Do you want to be moving? Do you want it to be coming in, coming out, going left, going right. There's a random seed number. So whenever a AI video image is being created, it uses a random number generator to make a seed. If you were to use the exact same number, you would actually get essentially the same output. This is more for advanced, but there are scenarios for advanced users who would want to recreate the same thing as you've made in the past. And you describe what you want to create in terms of the video, or you can upload the first frame or the last frame. In this case, let's say, a boy is eating an easter egg. And then we'd have a video. And that's essentially it. It's very simple. It's now generating a video, and this will take a little while, so I will speed this up. Okay, the video has finished loading. This is the result that it gave us. We have a little child here. Looks like this Easter egg appears to be some kind of doughnut. It's a very squishy looking Easter egg. Yeah, so that's essentially the gist. Currently, this is brand new for Adobe, so this is still Beta. This took a lot longer to create than Halo or Luma does, and you can only generate one at a time. But, I mean, this is the Adobe, so they're going to make this much better in the near future. That is essentially the gist of using Firefly to create AI video. 12. Fish Audio Text To Voice: Now let's cover how to create audio Voiceover. Essentially, you can have a AI do the narration for your video. So this can be reached at Fishaudiofsh dot Audio. That's the current URL for the website, but you type this in, you'll find a site. And there is a free trial version, but even if you have the paid version, it's actually very cheap. It's something only like $10. So you can consider this, but definitely try out the free demo to see if this is something that you'd be interested in, but it's probably the best thing you're going to find currently. I haven't found anything quite as good as this one anywhere else. Let's just describe what it is. It's a AI tool that allows you to have AI readout, whatever text you want it to read out. And the thing is, it can be anything. It doesn't even have to be presets. You can create your own from scratch. So let's explore this and you'll get a just some of the incredible things you can do with it. So I've already logged in, and I'm going to go to Text to Speech, and you can see you have an option for instance speech. And here we have several choices for the audio that can be read out. So text to speech, it says, You can insert information of how you want the speech to be done. In this case, since I'm just going to take some of the texts for narrating the story that we were doing earlier on, I'm going to imagine it's the beginning of the story and we have a narrator describing our character. And then you select the voice model that you want to use, and you can have And now you can see the voice that you want to use and choose whoever you want to read it out. In this case, you can have a bunch of celebrities. These are clearly the most popular ones. For example, like you have Elon Musk read it out. Let's see what he sounds like. So the key to effective noise reduction is understanding signal process Well, that would be a very boring narration, but yeah, you could do that. What if I want to Ronaldo to read it out? Every day, I push myself to be better than yesterday. People ask me why I still train so hard, why I'll be kind of amusing. Um, Peter Griffin. Let me share an important insight from my years of experience. I guess that's Seth McFarlan really. Um, Best. Guys, I'm about to do something insane. Not a fan of that. Let's have a Let's try a really authoritative voice here. Obama's not a bad idea. Stoop Dog could be amusing. Yo, check it out. I'm sitting here thinking. As Snoop Dog. Alright. So this is going to be the voice that's gonna be reading out this text here. I'm going to leave these as is. Gonna hit Create. In the quiet of the night, when the world sleeps soundly, a young boy named Jackson waits with the patience of a dreamer, eyes wide heart racing for something extraordinary, something he can't quite explain, but knows is about to unfold. As the clock ticks past midnight, the air in the house seems to shift as if holding its breath. The room, dim and filled with shadows, is still, but somewhere something stirs. Got to say, Snoop Dog does not do a bad narration. That is pretty good. And then you can just download it here. So that is using the pre existing models for reading out your text. Alternatively, if you have audio, you can create your own. Under this build new voice, you essentially give it a name, whatever name you want it to. And then all you have to do is upload an audio file of at least 30 seconds of any one talking, and it will be able to generate a voice of that. So you can speak into a microphone, record that, upload that file here. Um, and you'll then have a voice that you can use to read out your narration. Um, yeah, so that's essentially the main gist of this software. You can see all of the models that you have available. This is some of the ones that I've used previously, and it's already saved. You can just easily use them up. When you're looking through them, you just got to click this little icon here and it'll save them in your voice libraries. You can easily reference them later on. Under the custom voice, any de voice that you created yourself, will show up there, and then you can say use that voice. But, yeah, that's essentially the gist of it. That's pretty much the tool. You can have AI read out whatever dialogue you want. The last thing I do want to mention, though, is in terms of these characters here. So when you're generating the scripts, in this case, I had this Well, we had Snoop Dog reading it out. You'll see it says 421 out of 30,000. What is that referring to? That's referring to the number of characters. So it's saying, in theory, you could put up to 30,000 characters of text in here, but that actually doesn't work. You'll find if you do that, it'll generate the video or the audio. But by the time you get to three quarters two, the audio will disintegrate into this mush of sound. It's not reading it properly at all. If you want to have the audio sound clear and crisp and actually intelligible, you're going to want to keep it under 3,000 characters. Now that's a little easier said than done. How do you know how many characters your audio is? Well, if you just grab a Word Doc, paste your text into it, and then you can go to Review word count, and there you'll be able to see the number of characters in your dialogue. So in this case, I'm way under 3,000. But in theory, you had a whole bunch of this text, and you weren't sure how much you wanted. You go to your word count. You say, Okay, this is almost 3,000. I'm going to want to make sure that I'm only taking it in chunks of 3,000 and then sticking it into here. So you can see this is now almost 3,000 text. You wouldn't want to go much above that. Okay, that's it. That's everything I want to talk about here. You now know how to use AI to create a narration for whatever purpose you want to use it for. E. 13. Adobe Premiere Basics: In this video, we're going to go over Adobe Premiere Pro. It's a leading industry editing software for video, and we're going to go over the basics so that you can edit your AI video footage. So we're going to cover four topics in this video to get you started. So this is going to be importing clips, essential editing, shortcuts, how to add transitions, and how to add effects for your video. So the first thing you need is Adobe Premiere Pro. So you can get that at this website link, adobe.com slashPductlaSh Premiere. And you can download a Fretral so you can check it out before you buy it if you don't already have this software, and then once you go into the software, I guess I'll make a new project for you guys. So if we were to create a new project, you'll see something that looks like this, and we can call it whatever you want. Let's say my first project and Cha creates. And you'll see something along lines of this. We don't actually need to use this at the moment. I'm just going to either hit the skip button or hit the Edit button. I want to go straight into the editing interface. So this is the home dashboard of your Adobe Premiere. This is where all the magic happens. And the first thing that time you see this, it may feel a little overwhelming. There are a lot of controls. And to be fair, you can spend years on this and still be learning new things. I still discover new tabs and buttons and features every time, and they're always adding new ones as well. So we don't want to overwhelm you with everything here. We want to give you just enough to get started, and then you can pick up more on your own than this infinite tutorials where you can learn all this stuff. So let's just get you with enough to get going in, though. So the first thing you need to do is import your video footage. So in this case, I've already downloaded my video files from the AI generators that we were playing with earlier in the course. So grab a few of those clips, whatever ones you like. And you're going to drag them. You can drag them into here or you can drag them into here. This is the easiest way. In this case, I find it straightforward to drag them into the project like that. And we can see that the video project has been the video files have been dragged in. We now have five little clips. I can either press this or you'll see by hovering over it, there's a little space keyboard shortcut. I choose to use shortcuts as much as I can. And if you hover over any single button in this interface, you'll see the keyboard shortcut to do so. So I can either play that or hit space, and you'll see how video footage is moving. So this is your timeline. This shows you the beginning of your video, and it shows you how much time is elapsing. So 15 seconds, 30 seconds in your video footage where it says V. This is all your videos. These are layers of clips similar to Photoshop, where you have layers, and you can see the top layer and then anything that's underneath it and so on. And this is your audio layers, where you can have multiple layers of audio. So the most common thing that you'll be doing here is moving these clips around. You can just left click to drag clips. And the most essential one really is delete. So we need to learn how to delete clips. So there's a few ways to do it. You can right click and try to hit Delete, but that's long and I find it's much easier just to use the keyboard shortcut. So there is a ripple delete, which is probably the most important one. But you can also do that by hitting Shift and then delete. So for example, here, you hit hold down Shift and then delete. Do you do that, it will actually delete and move the cursor. So I can, for example, click the second clip here, hit Shift and delete, and it will move any clips behind it into the position of the other one. That's kind of your most important keyboartuq of all eclips is that ripple delete one. Alternatively, you can click onto clips and just drag with your left mouse to make them longer shorter. You'll notice that these things are snapping into place, for example, you see this little black line that's appearing right there. That black line is there because this magnet button is clicked. And that provides you with ease otherwise, you won't necessarily have the exact timing that you want. So I recommend having that on, and then everything will snap nicely. I'm zooming in and out and moving left and right by left clicking on this little toolbar down here. And to zoom in, I'm also holding down Alt, and then I'm scrolling with my mouse scroll bar. That's the easiest way to zoom in and out onto your video footage. So we've covered essentially getting your clips in. We've covered a few essential shortcuts in terms of keyboard. Next thing I want to cover is providing effects onto your clips. So if you want to have effects, you need to, for example, I want to make this have an effect on it, maybe black and white or any kind of effect. There's a few things you need to have is you need to have an Effects Control panel right here. And this might not show up initially. So if it's not there, you can go to Windows and share this effects control is selected. For all these, these are all different windows, tabs. These things will all appear and disappear depending on whether these things are checked. So for example, I uncheck that, actually, it looks like it's ing checked. But if you're not seeing something, you can always come to this window and then check it, and then you should be able to see your panel has been enabled somewhere. But let's say I click this clip, and then I go to this effect Control tab and I can see all of these different effects that are available here. For example, there's a scale that will make the video click larger and smaller. Sometimes when you import a video, it'll be not the right size. One way to get to the full screen size is to go to the Ex call in scale, or alternatively, you can right click on it and hit Fit FL frame, and that will also adjust it to 100%. So in terms of effects here, all of these things can be manipulated. For example, you can rotate things and so on. We're not going to spend a huge amount here because that's an entire course in itself. I do want to mention there's a thing called keyframes, though and this is where you will spend a lot of time if you are trying to have things change over time. So, for example, this thing here is a animation keyframe, and I can go to the beginning of my clip here. Toggle is by left clicking on it. And what I've done here is I've created a keyframe. There's a little keyframe on the left side here. And that's saying, that's what I want this effect value to be at this time, at this time of 0 seconds. You notice the 0 seconds and 0 seconds are matching up 5 seconds, 5 seconds. And now let's say I wanted to go to the end of the clip. I can use my keyboard here with my arrows. I can just use these arrows, the down arrow in this case. I click the down arrow, I can go to the end of the clip. I hit the up arrow, I can go left to the clip. So right clip, left, depending on up or down keys of my keyboard there. Anyway, so if I go to the end of the clip, I can then say, right, at this five second point, I want to add a second keyframe. And I want to have that value zoomed in more. So I'm going to zoom in, sorry, I need to go back one frame. Yeah. So I can say I want to zoom in more to this little club here. And then I can add in a second keyframe here. In this case, it's adding it automatically because this is adjusting. So now if I were to play this club is actually zooming in, so I realize that's a little confusing's to do that one more time, if this is the first time you've seen this, that's a lot going on. So I'm going to delete these clef frames again. Um, so I'm going to start at the beginning of this clip here, have my first value that I want it to be set to. Then I'm going to go to the end of the clip. In this case, I can hit the down key on my keyboard. Go back one frame. Now I want to set whatever value I want it to be at the second time. And then you'll see a second keyframes being added. And now if we go back to the beginning, we can see it's actually zooming in overtime. Alright, that's key frames. That's effects. I'm going to show you now. There are lots of effects here. That was one effect the zooming in, but here you can see tons and tons of video effects here. For example, there's like distortion effects. You can have mirror effects, flipping things, twirling effects, this color correction. There's so many things here. But when you add an effect, essentially, you say, right, I'm going to check my effect. I'm going to drag it onto the clip of my choice. And what you'll see now is that the effect has been added under the effects control, and then you can do whatever you want to do to automate that clip. You'll notice that whenever I make a change or something, I'm going back and forth between turning it on or turning it off. I'm doing that with the undo and redo keyboard shortcuts. Those are going to be your best friends, very similar to a Word document. So that's how you can have an effect placed onto your clip. There's also transitions. So let's take a look at those. That's also in this effects control. These are ways to go from one clip to another clip with a little bit of animation between them. So, for example, I use this cross dissolve all the time, and I can drag that on to my clips. So if I drag it here, it's it's going to provide a transition fading out of one of my clips into the second one of my clips. You can also make those longer or shorter or whatever. For example, by zooming in, I can adjust the length of. Okay. I think the last thing I want to cover here is the viewer. So if I click on the viewer here, you'll notice it's kind of small, and that can be annoying when you want to be previewing it. So although you could be stretching it like this, there's a much easier way to do this. On your keyboard, there's a little command called tiled. It's this little thing right here. If you press that while this is selected, it becomes full screen, and then you can view your video footage in a much larger detail. And then the last thing I want to cover in this video is these down here. So you can remember this is layers. So you can turn them on and off turn another layer on and off just like Photoshop. So, for example, I can have a clip on top of another clip. And actually, in this case, we can even see the original clip is behind it. See that little orange behind it, you can see this is on top of the second one. So by toggling these, you're enabling one clip to be viewed over another clip. So that's going to be really handy sometimes. For example, if I were I wanted a clip to come in on top of it for some reason, that would be the way you do that. You can lock them. So now this clip is no longer movable, I can try and drag and move it and it won't do anything. This clip is in place. And in terms of audio, sometimes you'll have music. Example, I'll just drag an audio clip in here. The exact same thing applies as the video layers to the audio. So you can drag them up and down a layer. You can have multiple audio layers streamed on top of each other. And then this is the mute track. So if you want it to be quiet, you can select that, and now it won't play the audio when the video footage is playing. So that's a very important feature. And that's essentially the main basics of Adobe Premiere. So you should be able to drag into your audio clips, apply any effects that you desire onto them, move them around to edit them. You can drag on effects and transitions onto your eclipse. And you can make your videos now. Okay, um, that's the very, very basics of Adobe Premiere. There's lots of courses on YouTube or on any course on Adobe Premiere, if you want to go further, but this should get you up and running for now. 14. Generating Subtitles With AI: So far in the course, we have created the script with hat GPT. We created the image romps in hachPT. We created the images in the video using Halo AI, and we created the voice over narration using Phish Audio. Now, in this particular course, we're going to generate the subtitles for the video and combine all of the assets together. I'm going to do this using Adobe Premiere Pro. This is one of the most commonly used video editing softwares. So when you first load Premiere Pro, this is what you see, you can create a new project. In this case, I have a project here. So you'll see something like this. And then you just need to drag your assets into the video. All right. So in this case, I have a folder with my assets. G to select them, drag them in that's easy to drag them in. So now I have two videos, some audio. I can just drag those into here. And now I have my audio my images here, so through the timeline. And we have our audio here? In the quiet of the night when the world sleeps soundly, a young there's our Robert Dany junior describing our audio narration. Um, I'm going to delete. Don't need that one. I can drag these clips around to reposition them. So I'm going to just make these clips the whole length of the video, I'm going to control copy, Control C, Control V to paste, and I'm just going to delete these. I'm just selecting it and then clicking Delete on my keyboard. All right. I want to focus here on the subtitle part. So, the audio can be converted into subtitles very quickly using Premiere Pro. The way to do that is to, in this case, we see this window here that says text. This isn't always available, so I want to make sure you know how to get to this. Um, it should be a view here. This take text. You want to make sure this is selected. If that's not selected, you may not see this option here. But if you select the clip and you go to this text section and this panel, you can see create captions from transcript. Now there are a few ways to create captions here. This one is the one I want to focus on. The other ways are more manual. I'll take a lot more work, but this course is about AI, so we're going to use AI to generate the subtitles. So I'm going to select that, and then you have an option here for your preferences here. If you have different speakers, you can choose how to deal with that. For caption preferences, this is more interesting part is you can choose whether you want the subtitles to be a single line or double line. In this case, I usually prefer a single line. I think it looks a little better. You can choose some preferences here, whether you want to decide how many characters you want to show up. And then you click transcribe and create captions. And it should only take a little bit of time, in that case, because it's a very short audio. And we can see here the subtitles has been created for our entire video. So if I were to just play this now. In the quiet of the night when the world sleeps soundly, a young boy named Jackson waits with the patience of a dreamer, eyes wide, heart racing for something extraordinary, something he can't quite explain, but knows is about to unfold. As the clock ticks past midnight, the air in the house seems to shift as if holding its breath. So not bad. Now, these subtitles here, we can actually adjust how they look, so I can select all of this, and there should be a little properties thing over here. If you don't see it, once again, go to Window and then make sure properties are selected. And then you may have to scroll around because maybe it's hidden up here or down here. But essentially, once you found it, eventually, this properties thing exists, you can drag it up to seal more of these features here. And now let's play around with these. Often, you may want to make them a little bit bigger. Maybe you want them capitals. Maybe that's easy to read. The font sides. You can change that. Maybe it'll make that bigger. What else do you want to play with here? The stroke. The stroke's often good, and then you can make the color of the stroke, for example, black. Makes it a little easier to read. And then you're gonna want to try shadow a shadow makes it look kind of ugly. So take that out, and we can read that pretty well now. The stroke, maybe you want to increase that as well if you want to make that ten or something like that. Maybe that's too much, maybe eight. And because I selected them all at once, the effects apply to all of them. So now I can go at the beginning of my video. In the quiet of the night, when the world sleeps soundly, a young boy named Jackson waits with the patience of a dreamer, eyes wide, heart racing for something extraordinary, something he can't quite explain, but knows is about to unfold. As the clock ticks past midnight, the air in the house seems to shift as if holding its breath. The room dim and filled with shadows is still, but somewhere something stirs There you go. We created our video, compiled the clips together. We have the video, with the audio. We generated subtitles, all using AI. We didn't have to manually create the scripts. The images. We didn't have to go take photos, didn't have to film anything. The audio, we didn't have to hire the actor to read it out. We just sent in the dialogue. The subtitles, we didn't have to give to someone else to generate or manually type in all the text. If for some reason, so there's another thing I want to mention. Let's say I changed some of the dialogue for some reason, and I had part of this dialogue with something else. And, hey, these subtitles here, these are going to be different now than what they originally were because I have some new audio here. I put in I put in a new audio for this section for this beginning part. Of a dreamer. Eyes Wide heart race. Now, the subtitles are not matching the audio. I sing for something extraordinary. So how do you fix that? Because this is kind of a common problem that you experience all the time. What you can do if you try to just generate it again, it's actually going to generate the exact same script here. It's not going to listen to the new audio. So the way to get around that is to go to new sequence. Now you can bring in the audio that you want to use. So in this case, this audio, put it in here. And now you can generate a new set of captions for this little section here. So now I have this. Since of a dreamer Eyes Wide heart racing for something then I can copy all of that. Go back to the original timeline. And I can replace that section. Of a dreamer eyes wide heart racing for something extraordinary. Yeah, so that's just a little issue that you're going to run into now and then, and this is the quick way to fix that is using a do sequence. Yeah, so that's essentially the gist of it. We created an entire video using AI, and we've compiled it together. And now we know how to create videos using artificial intelligence. 15. Exporting Video: Okay, the last thing is to export the video. So we have this video sequence. You can select the sequence, go to File, Export. You can choose either of these two. In this case, I'm going to focus on exporting from Premiere Pro. You name your file, whatever name you wanted to give it. You choose the folder you wanted to save it in, so you can find it later. I'll leave that it is. Adapt bit is fine. This is saving an MP four format if you use the h264, so I recommend using that one. That one is easily used on exporting to YouTube or something like that. And then use Export. And that's how you get your video out from your Pro. 16. Case Study: In this video, I want to show you a little case study. This is just a little project that I worked on. It's a 32nd news story entirely created with artificial intelligence. So I'm just going to show you the video and then we'll walk through how it was created. You'll see a lot of the tools were done using tools that you've already seen, and then I'll introduce you to a tool that syncs up a video or a photo and makes them speak dialogue. So you'll have lip syncing movement. Yeah, so let's show you the video first, and then we'll get into all of the tools afterwards. Live outside, a lone star federal bank in downtown Dallas, Texas, where two masked suspects stormed in earlier today and men in fash at gunpoint. A silent alarm alerted the police who arrived within minutes surrounding the building. One suspect was caught while trying to escape with the second flood on foot and is still at large. Police are actively searching for the suspect and urge anyone with information to come forward. For now, Dows remained on alert as the man hunt continues. Alright, so let's dive into how this was created. So most of this is using stuff that you've already seen in the course, the videos footage of the robbery itself, everyone moving around. And mended fash at gunpoint. This mute theft now. So all of this is done using Halo AI. You'll notice there's a camera panning movements. That's specified when you're creating the video, you can choose how the movement's going. Actually, in this thing here, I showed this video to my mother, and she said, Hey, I see Nathan Fillion. I was like, Oh, yeah, you're right. That is Nathan Fillion. So you can see the reference that Halo AI is using for creating the video footage because I just typed in a prompt such as police walking a suspect to the car or something. And Nathan Fillion showed in there uninvited. So clearly, Halua AI is using some kind of cop show that has Nathan Fillion in it. I just using that to create this. I just thought it was kind of a fun little quirk of the system. They probably don't have permission, but oh, well, that's their problem. Yeah, so we have. This is all done Haley AI. I had a script generating chat GPT to have all of these shot list and how each of these scenes is going to look. And then I guess the most different part about this is the lip syncing right here. You'll see he's moving and his lips are matching the dialogue, which is created separately from the video. So how do we do that? For that, I used a tool called Vozo you can go to Vozo here. This is the website. And essentially, it's a tool that can do two things lip dumping or translation, which is pretty cool. Once you've gone in and created an account, you'll see something like this where you have two options. There are two here where you could either create a video or you could have your character speak a different language entirely, like Spanish or Chinese or something. I'll let you do that Newmon. That's a little beyond the purpose of this video, but just to give you a gist of how I created that one, I click this Taking video. And you can have an existing video, or you can have a photo, and it will make adjustments to match the mouth movement to the audio. In my case, I chose a photo. Then you drag in the photo, so I dragged in my character, my reporter. And if you had audio, you could upload that. In my case, I did have audio, so I just uploaded an audio file of the thing I wanted him to say. Alternatively, you can type out whatever the reporter is going to say. You select the language you want him to speak it, which is pretty cool. You can choose a completely different language. You choose the voice. There's lots of voices to pick from. I bet this catalog is just going to get larger and larger. And then once you've done that, I don't know, I just pick that now I am a reporter. And then you select generate, and that's it. That's all it took. Then I had the video file. I downloaded it, and it moved the character and it moved the mouth, it actually also added, if you notice here, you'll notice it even added a little bit of movement in flashing behind it. So Vozo does a pretty good job of lip syncing, I must say, I'm very impressed with that. The lip syncing is incredible in terms of the movement. It did some weird things with the eyes, though. So clearly, there's work to be done. But, I mean, it's still doing miracles already. So yeah, this is the little case story I wanted to show you with. And that's how I made this project. 17. Royalty Free Music: I want to show you a resource where you can get royalty free music for your videos. This this website here, the solsund.com library. This is a website where you can get royalty free music. I'm sure there's lots out there, but this just happens to be a free one. You don't have to pay for the music. A lot of them charge you for it, so it's quite nice. You go into this site, and then essentially, you can choose. Do you want for short, it doesn't really matter because it doesn't worry about copyright claims. But for longer videos, often you have music that would result in a copyright claim normally. So if you use this site, it gives you a list of music that's very easy to download. You just literally click this download button. You can listen to a variety of music here. You can search by genres. For example, you want some kind of soundtrack or something. Maybe you'll go for cinematic, and then you'll have lots of different options for music at cinematic, and it's arranged by tags in case you wanted to find something similar. Example, I hit Mysterious. Now I'm going to get songs that have mysterious and also cinematic or something like that. Um, yeah, that's really it. It's not a complicated site. You can submit your own music if you wanted to. I don't think that's going to be relevant for a lot of you. But, yeah, you can create music. You can submit music, listen to music, download music, search B and B tags, and then download it. So, yeah, that's just a quick little thing. If you need some royalty free music, check it out. That's the soul sound. 18. Conclusion: Congratulations. You've made it to the end of the course. You're now able to create video using artificial intelligence. That wasn't so bad, was it? You were able to do that in a day. And probably less than a day, really, only took you a little bit of time. You didn't have to do any of the work. Artificial intelligence did all the work. We covered a lot of things in this course. You learned how to build a script using artificial intelligence, build image prompts, using AI, create the images with AI as well. Then we had the video being created used reference images. You could have a reference character that's consistent throughout your video, or you could just have text to create the video itself. We showed you how to create audio narration using AI, so you can have any person at all in the world read out dialogue for your film. And then finally, we learned how to make subtitles using artificial intelligence so that you don't have to manually type in all of the dialogue that's being spoken on the screen. You can just have an AI read it out for you. If you enjoy this, I encourage you to check out my other courses. They're available at chestersky.com. I have courses on music, music production, composing, there's a course in finance, comedy. Specifically for those interested in AI, though, you may be interested in checking out Stable difusion, which is an AI tool for image generation. Specifically, you have a lot of hands on control over how I can build your images. For example, you can be very specific in the type of styles. You can have in painting where you can swap images out, out painting, you can make images larger. You can upscale your images and videos. You can create infinite Zoom animations and so on. There's lots of other things like that. So if you're interested, check out these other courses, and that's it. Hope you enjoyed the course, and hopefully if you enjoyed it, please leave a nice review, and we'll see you next time in any of these other courses. All right, take care.