If you get creative with speaking and reacting to another speaker, you can actually be both speakers.
Practice with different clips, then use masking to slice up one video into two sections, and layer the 2nd part on top of the 1st.
The ultra boring version of this showing how long this actually took me, will be on inside the course (currently free) on Shreditor.
" Okay, so we actually are gonna talk about masking now. Uh, I'm gonna take a seat and I'm gonna have a little conversation and maybe look at our other guests here. Me being way over here, them being here. I actually wish I micd up, um, if I didn't, so me sitting right there. Likely said something, but he's super tired.
He isn't planning these videos till way too late in the night. Um, and I think it'd be super awkward if I just look at him for a minute
and all of this possible because we just split the scene in half. And I shared different portions of the same video, uh, just using masking, so."
That's a clever use of video editing techniques to create a unique and engaging content format. Masking can certainly give the illusion of having multiple 'you's in the same space, and it can lead to some really fun interactions. It's a testament to your creativity and mastery over your editing tools. Can't wait to see what else you'll be creating with these techniques!