 I wanted to show my workflow for baking in captions or subtitles into videos. And there's various ways to do this. The reason to do it is for accessibility for people, obviously, who can't hear the audio track in your files, and for video players that don't have closed captioning. This works really well in a 3. It might not be the fastest method out there, but it involves the least amount of manual work. So what I do is upload my videos to YouTube. And so in YouTube Studio here, I've got a list of videos. I go to Details. If I click on Subtitles, I can see here's my automatic subtitles. If I click these three dots, I can click Download. I'm just going to choose SRT. This method will work with multiple formats. Here's my caption file. And I'm just going to put that in here. And now what I use is a free program called Handbrake. It's available for Windows, Mac, and Linux. I have Mac. Now I'm going to choose Open Source. Go to that Wayfinding video. And I'm in this, you might start in the Summary tab. I'm in this Subtitles section here. And what I want to do is under Tracks, click Add External Subtitles Track and Wayfinding. There's my captions file from YouTube. And I want to choose Burned In. You may not want to use Burned In. You may want to use a layer that can toggle those captions, then you don't need to do this. And then, of course, with your video, you can set all the options you want for frame rate, quality, et cetera. I'll just leave them at the default for now. I'm going to call it Wayfinding CC. Put it in the right folder and hit Start. You can see it moves pretty quickly. And so now when I open this video, we've got these Subtitles Tracks in here. And they're baked in, meaning they're part of the video.