I also connected the Elgato Keylight to my table for the video podcast and YouTube episodes. I no longer have to set up lights or lug light stands around. My Canon camera is also connected directly to the table, also via a tripod. All cables are now plugged into my docking station. Of course, everything from Razer is linked in the description, as I said, so I only have to plug a single cable into my Macbook and I am immediately connected to all the tools: camera, light, microphone.
For recording software, you can use Garageband for solo episodes if you have a Mac. If you’re a Windows user, a simple Google search will help you and you’ll find some free audio tools. For remote interviews, when you’re interviewing other people for your podcast and they’re in a different location, so you’re doing the interview over the internet, don’t use Zoom, but use specially designed software that’s much more stable and has been made specifically for that purpose.
I use riverside.fm
It’s a special content marketing tool that was made for exactly this kind of situation, for remote interviews. There’s high greece email list video quality, high audio quality, less latency, and even if someone’s internet crashes, everything is saved locally, the data isn’t lost. You can also edit it directly in the tool, export clips, so that’s exactly what it was made for. Zoom wasn’t made for remote interviews.
So look at a tool
I use riverside.fm, which was made especially for remote interviews, plus I transcribe all my podcasts for my website. For shoppers into loyal customers additionally post-holiday emails this I use the tool Amberscript, there is a very cheap AI version. But you can also have a human transcribe it. Then of course that be numbers costs more.
And if you’re doing a multicam podcast where there are two or three or more people talking and you may even have set up multiple cameras, then I recommend the Autopod tool. It lets you have an AI edit your interview within seconds.