Upload the footage.
We cut the show.
Drop in every camera and mic. SwitchCut finds who's talking, cuts to them, and hands back a finished, editable CapCut project. It runs on your Mac, so your footage never leaves it.
The host speaks.
SwitchCut holds their close-up. No jitter, no random switching.
The guest jumps in.
It hears the handoff and cuts on the beat, the way a good editor would.
They talk over each other.
Crosstalk goes to the wide. Every decision, made for you.
Three steps.
No timeline scrubbing.
Drop in every angle
Add each camera and the audio: MP4s, MOVs, separate mics. Whatever your setup records, hand it over.
It hears who's talking
SwitchCut reads the audio, works out who's speaking, and cuts to their camera on the beat. Crosstalk goes to the wide.
Open it in CapCut
Get a real, editable CapCut project. Every cut is placed. Nudge it, trim it, or ship it as-is.
Not a render.
The actual timeline.
Every cut is a real clip on a real track. Open it in CapCut and nudge a cut, swap an angle, add your B-roll and captions. SwitchCut does the boring 90%. You keep the last 10%.
I've spent too many Sundays dragging a playhead across four camera angles to find who was talking. So I built the editor I wanted: you hand it the footage, it makes the cut, and you still own the timeline. That's the whole thing.
Stop cutting podcasts by hand.
We're opening SwitchCut to a first group of multicam creators. Hand it one episode and see the cut it hands back. Mac first; tell us below if you're on Windows.