Overview
Video pacing problems are misdiagnosed when every slow video is treated as a cut-frequency problem. A video that feels slow because the shots are static and contain no movement within the frame is not fixed by cutting faster — cutting faster between static shots produces a series of abrupt jumps rather than pace. A video that feels slow because the dialogue is dense and information-heavy is not fixed by shorter shots — the information pace determines the viewer's cognitive load, and cutting visual pace independently of audio pace creates cognitive dissonance. Pacing diagnosis must identify whether the problem is visual, audio, or structural before any fix is applied.
The Video Pacing & Rhythm Framework diagnoses the correct cause of pacing problems, applies the fix that addresses the diagnosed cause, and builds the editing rhythm that serves the video's emotional and informational purpose.