FinalCutHub is a practical Final Cut Pro publication for editors who want cleaner timelines, safer media workflows, better audio, reliable exports, and fewer last-minute rebuilds.
The site is not built around feature worship. It is built around the moments where real edits break: media goes offline, multicam sync drifts, dialogue gets buried, a color grade falls apart after upload, or the wrong export gets sent to a client.

What we publish
We publish Final Cut Pro tutorials, workflow explainers, codec guides, plugin buying filters, hardware advice, export settings, audio cleanup workflows, color correction basics, and editor checklists. Each article is meant to answer a real production question, not simply describe a menu item.
Editorial standard
Every guide starts with search intent: what the editor is trying to solve, what the current ranking pages cover, and what they usually miss. Then we write from the working editor's point of view: what to click, what to avoid, what to check before export, and when a tool is the wrong answer.
After drafting, claims are checked against current official documentation and primary sources where possible. Version-sensitive topics such as codecs, supported media, release notes, export settings, and app comparisons are treated carefully because stale advice can waste hours.
How to read the site
If you are new to Final Cut Pro, start with beginner guides, import workflow, magnetic timeline, keyboard shortcuts, audio, color, and export. If you already edit regularly, use the workflow, ProRes, multicam, plugins, and comparison articles as decision tools.
What we avoid
We avoid generic AI-style filler, fake certainty, empty plugin hype, and abstract visuals that do not help the reader. A guide should make the next edit easier. If a paragraph does not help an editor make a better decision, it does not belong here.