Pluraleyes 5 ✓
He opened PluralEyes 5.
Leo smiled. He added a cross dissolve, a LUT, and exported the rough cut by 2:17 AM.
He scrubbed through the timeline. There, on camera four, was the money shot: the losing team’s captain, a grizzled fabricator named Dolly, ripping off her safety glasses and screaming, “THAT’S MY BOT!” just as the saw blade hit. The sound from his master track dropped onto her face with perfect lip sync.
Ten cameras. Ten separate scratch audio tracks. Ten wildly different starting points. pluraleyes 5
The assistant editor, Maya, had tried to sync it manually. After four hours of sliding waveforms and staring at clapperboards that nobody had bothered to use consistently, she’d thrown her wireless mouse across the room. It now rested in pieces by the coffee machine.
Leo leaned back. He felt a strange mix of relief and a tiny, bruised sense of professional pride. It had taken him ten seconds to do what would have taken him all night.
It found the identical sonic fingerprints across all eleven clips. It matched the hiss of the GoPro’s internal mic to the clarity of his boom. It even detected that Kevin’s iPhone was 1.3 seconds behind because the kid had started recording late. He opened PluralEyes 5
Leo had been the A-1 sound mixer on set. He knew his own audio—a pristine, dual-system recording from his boom and lavaliers—was flawless. The problem was the cameras. To capture the frenetic energy of the warehouse floor, the producers had unleashed a horde of operators: three Sony FX6s, two RED Komodos, four GoPros zip-tied to drone cases, and one rogue iPhone 14 Pro held by an intern named Kevin who’d been told to “just get the vibes.”
As he packed up, he glanced at the broken mouse by the coffee machine. He didn't feel like he’d cheated. He felt like he’d finally stopped fighting the tools and started telling the story. PluralEyes 5 hadn’t stolen his craft. It had given him back his night.
He held his breath and clicked “Sync.” He scrubbed through the timeline
The timeline refreshed. Eleven tracks. Perfectly aligned. The clap of a metal door slamming shut at the 00:03:12:15 mark on the master audio now appeared at exactly the same frame on the GoPro, the RED, and the vertical iPhone footage. It was surgical. It was instantaneous.
Leo Voss was staring down the barrel of a ten-camera disaster.
It was 2:00 AM in a cramped post-production suite in Burbank. Before him, on a monitor the size of a small car, lay the raw footage for Battle of the Build Teams , a high-stakes reality competition where three crews of fabricators had forty-eight hours to turn scrap metal into functioning battle bots. The finale had been chaos: sparks flying, hosts shouting, and a surprise upset where the underdog team’s robot, “Stitches,” had sawed the reigning champion clean in half.
Leo had scoffed at first. He was old school. He cut his teeth on Steenbecks and magnetic film. Syncing by eye, by slate, by the shape of a waveform—that was a craft. But at 1:30 AM, with a delivery deadline looming at 9:00 AM and a producer named Stacey sending increasingly terse emojis (the skull, the bomb, the hourglass), he relented.
“Leo,” she’d said, walking out at 1:00 AM, “that timeline is a crime scene. You need a miracle. Or PluralEyes.”