Start the outline with sunrise shots for the first minute. Then add shots of each character introducing themselves in multiple takes. Then add shots of shots of <speaker> at the doctors office making jokes, <speaker> driving to work, <speaker> waiting for her coffee. Then add shots of the characters at the gym during their lunch break.
I need a outline with lots of emotion. Find the deepest moments. I want shots of <speaker> crying. Build a suspenseful moment. Then, add shots of <speaker> making fun of <speaker>. Add all of the shots of <speaker> laughing and criticizing <speaker>. Finish off the sequence with <speaker> saying lines like "no one understands me" and similar lines to get sympathy.
Make an outline with a full character arc and follows the Hero’s Journey formula. The show is for National Geographic and should have a slow pace at first. The outline should begin with a red herring from all the characters. Then the characters will introduce themselves. Then we begin the story by topic (enter topics). At the end, add in shots that were not used in this outline but that have interesting quotes.
If you have one sequence that’s been transcribed, you can use Auto Edit and select only the speaker.
In Guided Edit mode, Prompt: Assemble a sequence with the shots that have the most impact and depth. Then add in shots that have less discussion.
If you have multiple sequences of interviews, in Multi Edit mode, Prompt: Make an outline from these interviews and sort it by topic. Find similar topics and choose shots based on the transcript.