 This is an example of a video where we consider, to finish video, the audio really very closely or the dialogue very closely syncs with the video so it's not the kind of thing where you're just going to re-narrate something. The video really is tied to the audio. But in this case, this organization has done a really good job of making the main body of the video pretty generic and what I'll do is I'll play you just for about 30 seconds of the part of the video that we're going to customize. So this you really wouldn't want to re-narrate this part. But this is what you're going to be customizing, just the end, which is your local jurisdictional information with contact information where people can go to get help. And that's it. This is the end of the video produced by statewide legal services. So that's the video that we're going to do. And what you'll see in the kit, it has everything you need. If you go to this video kit in ShareLaw video, it will have instructions, which you can download in advance. It will have a link to the PowerPoint slides and you can use this download link to download the video. So what I do is I make myself a file, made myself a file. In advance, I made Word document with all local information. So if you've downloaded PowerPoint slides, I'll open that up. Basically you're going to just do what GAB did and you're going to insert your local information. So in this case, we're going to make the video for Metro Atlanta. I'm going to try to figure out how to spell Metro Atlanta. And then we're going to contact Atlanta Legal Aid here and the phone number. I'm going to delete that. Put the phone number down here. And then you would just go through each slide and customize them. I'm not going to do all of them. But you basically follow the same system that GAB suggested that you do. You do File and then Save As. You save it as an image. And basically you just go through and find JPEG and then you hit Save. And that says, do you want to export every slide in the presentation? You say yes. And just like it did in iMovie on a Mac, it will create a folder with the customized slides. And then you're done with the Customizing of PowerPoint section. And then what you do is open up Movie Maker. I'm going to open it up. And very similarly, you start a new project. You add the video, in this case, Navigate to the video. And here's the video file. You add the video file. Then you want to add the PowerPoint. So you hit Add Videos and Photos again. And this time, I'm sorry, you're adding the PowerPoint. So adding the Customize, what I do is I just highlight them all. And then they're there at the end. And then what you want to do is you put your cursor in the beginning. I don't know why you need to do that, but you do. And you go, in this case, we're going to delete part of the video where we showed the placeholders. And we're going to insert the customized PowerPoint slides. So one of the better ways to do this is to separate the audio from the video. So this is what I'm showing you to do now. So you select video and you just turn down the volume. Set the volume to zero. And then you go back to the home. And then you add music. And you scroll down and go All Files right here. And then you're going to find the video file and then open it. And so now you have your video files separated from your audio files in Movie Maker. Then what you want to do is cut out the video, parts of the video that are the placeholder content. Let me find it. So the best way to figure it out is to figure out where it starts in your video. And this one starts at 4 minutes 50 seconds. So I'm going to try to delete. Oops. Oh, that's why I couldn't do it all. So I'm going to hit the trim tool and set the endpoint. And I'm going to move the endpoint to the end of the video. And then that is hit trim tool. And that should have cut the video. And then we can transition, do the same thing, set the time that we want each slide to be six seconds. And then if you want to add transitions to your slides, you can, there's like a wide array of sort of set transitions, sort of like this paper transition, like you're flipping a page. We'll set it. And then when you're done, you're going to save the video and save, I like to save the project so you can modify it again and replace it. And then when you're ready to publish the video, you save it as a movie. And then I hit recommend, recommended for this project settings. And then it'll save as an MP4. And so process is very simple. I think this takes like 10 or 15 minutes as well. So does anybody have any questions about this? We're going to watch it sort of compile, but that's not super interesting. So I'm going to cancel this because there's not anything interesting about the movie that's kind of rendering. So rendering is clearly the most boring part of the entire process. Walk away, come back and get it, yeah. So really, if I could figure out how to do this, anybody can figure out how to do this. And the step-by-step instructions for sort of each type of customizing video are very simple. You can have a high school intern do this for you. All you have to do is check with your substantive experts, make sure the content is appropriate for your jurisdiction, and have an intern or somebody who doesn't, you know, is a perfect job for an intern, or somebody who is having a slow day on Friday wants to do something interesting. So hopefully we have made these easy and simple enough so that folks will start using the content on Share a Law video.