Lesson 11 of 11 · Module 6: Capstone
Capstone, The 3-Clip Mini-Series
Shoot, edit, and publish (or finalize as post-ready) a 3-clip mini-series in one consistent format, where every clip independently demonstrates a working hook, short-form cut density, synced captions, and a functioning loop.
Your Capstone Submission
There's no demo clip for a capstone: this one is proof of what you can do on your own, not something to watch first.
What to produce
Plan a 3-clip series with one connecting thread. Shoot, edit, caption, and loop all three clips, applying every earlier lesson’s standard to each one independently. Publish the series, or finalize all three as post-ready drafts if you’re not taking it live yet.
Submission checklist (5 items)
- All 3 clips independently pass the Lesson 1/2 first-2-seconds hook test.
- No shot in any of the 3 clips exceeds 3 seconds.
- Captions in all 3 clips are correct, sound-off comprehensible, and inside the safe zone.
- All 3 clips loop clean per the Lesson 8 no-visible-seam test.
- A viewer who’s seen only one clip can identify it as part of a series.
Objective
Why This Matters
This isn’t a new skill. It’s every skill in this track running at once, three separate times, with the added constraint of tying them together. A single good clip can happen by accident or by over-focusing on one dimension while letting the others slide. A series can’t. If your hook is strong but your loop is sloppy in clip two, or your captions are clean in clip one but drift outside the safe zone in clip three, the capstone will surface exactly that, the same way real posting eventually would, just faster and with less cost.
The Technique
Build it in the same order the track taught it, not from scratch:
1. Pick the thread first. Before shooting anything, decide what ties the three clips together: a numbered format (“Part 1 of 3”), a recurring bit or character, or a callback line that shows up in each one. This is the one genuinely new decision in this lesson, everything else is applying earlier lessons three times. 2. Plan and batch it (Lesson 9). Fill in your weekly template for these 3 pieces specifically, then batch-shoot all three in one session if the format allows it. 3. Hook each clip independently (Lessons 1 and 2). Each clip needs its own working first 2 seconds. A strong hook in clip one doesn’t carry over to clip two, viewers can land on any clip in the series first. 4. Cut for density (Lesson 4). No shot longer than 3 seconds, applied to each clip on its own. 5. Caption for sound-off (Lesson 5). Full comprehension muted, safe zones respected, in every clip. 6. Sync sound with intent if you’re using it (Lesson 7). 7. Close the loop (Lesson 8). Every clip needs its own clean ending, not just the final clip in the series. 8. Pack for the platform (Lesson 6). Decide up front which single platform this series is built for, and lean into its native pattern across all three. 9. Post and read it (Lesson 10) if you’re taking it live, the same 24-hour wait and retention-curve discipline applies here too.
Watch For This
Good
- Each of the 3 clips independently passes every earlier lesson’s checklist on its own, not just the series as a whole.
- The connecting thread is recognizable from any single clip in isolation, not just when all three are watched together.
- Series feels intentional and planned, not like three separate ideas retrofitted with a shared intro card.
Classic Failure
- One clip in the series is noticeably weaker (a dead hook, a missed loop, sloppy captions) because it got rushed relative to the other two.
- The connecting thread only makes sense if you already know all three clips exist, it doesn’t read from any single one.
- Series is technically 3 clips but they don’t actually share a platform, tone, or format, so it doesn’t read as one thing.
Your Drill
Plan a 3-clip series with one connecting thread. Shoot, edit, caption, and loop all three clips, applying every earlier lesson’s standard to each one independently. Publish the series, or finalize all three as post-ready drafts if you’re not taking it live yet.
Shot it? The AI coach below reviews your clip against this lesson's pass checklist.
Pass Checklist
Lesson complete
Criterion met: For every one of the 3 clips: the first 2 seconds independently passes the stop-scroll test from Lesson 1 or 2, no shot exceeds 3 seconds, captions are present, correct, and fully readable muted, the ending loops with no visible seam per Lesson 8’s test, and someone who has seen only one of the three clips can identify it as part of a series.
Back to Reels, TikTok and Shorts dashboardHow solid did that feel?
Noted.
Coach Note
If one specific clip is the weak one, go fix that specific clip against the specific check it’s failing. Don’t reshoot the whole series to avoid sitting with the fact that one piece needed more work. That instinct to start over rather than diagnose is the exact habit Lesson 10 was built to break, and it applies here too.
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Resurfaces In
This is the checkpoint. Every lesson in this track resurfaces here at once, and every future short-form clip you make should be checked against this same combined standard, not just this capstone.