Description
Remote Documentary Video Editor
Your Eye for Truth, Our Canvas—Create Documentaries That Matter
Ever find yourself pausing a documentary, not because of what’s being shown, but because of how it was told? That’s the magic we chase every day. Here, your sense of story shapes the way audiences connect to real lives and real events. This role puts you in the editor’s chair, where every splice, jump cut, and music cue becomes a chance to reveal something raw, bold, and deeply human. All from the comfort of your own space, with a team that values creative risk-taking just as much as technical polish.
What You’ll Actually Do
Some days, you’ll lose track of time, weaving together interviews, voiceovers, and those gritty b-roll shots that make a story breathe. Other days, you’ll wrestle with a sprawling archive, searching for the one clip that gives everything new meaning. It’s never just about finishing a project; it’s about unlocking a perspective viewers haven’t considered yet. You’ll:
- Dig into hours of footage and pull out threads that tell a bigger, more actual story.
- Ask challenging questions about every cut—does it move the narrative, does it honor the subject?
- Collaborate with directors, scriptwriters, and sound designers to elevate edits from "good enough" to unforgettable.
- Blend imagery and sound so that emotion lingers, even after the credits roll.
- Double-check every fact and stay true to the subject’s voice—no shortcuts, ever.
- Switch gears smoothly: sometimes you’ll shape long-form epics, other times, punchy shorts for social media or streaming.
- Use feedback not as a hurdle, but as creative fuel. We refine our best ideas together, not in isolation.
Your Toolkit—And Ours
You’ll get to geek out on everything from Premiere Pro to DaVinci Resolve to After Effects. Cloud tools keep us connected, so every note, timestamp, or revision loop is right there when you need it. No micromanagement—just trust, transparency, and a few Slack emojis when a cut lands just right. We’re set up for deep focus, quick pivots, and honest, creative exchange.
Who Thrives Here
Perhaps you’ve transformed raw interviews into something that makes people cry, laugh, or think twice. Maybe you know how to pull magic from chaos. You care about what’s real, and you’re never satisfied until the story feels alive. You welcome tough feedback, and you’re not afraid to push back if something’s missing the mark. You’re just as comfortable riffing with collaborators as you are deep-diving solo on a tight deadline.
You’ll Love This If...
- You’ve documentary credits (or personal projects) that demonstrate your ability to move an audience.
- You know your way around every major editing suite and can learn new tools on the fly.
- Remote work isn’t lonely for you; you see it as creative freedom. You’re a pro at sharing progress, syncing with global teams, and keeping feedback loops tight.
- Ethical storytelling is in your DNA. You’d never cut corners with the truth or someone’s lived experience.
- You can challenge ideas without ego and love when someone does the same for you.
Pay & Perks
You’ll be paid $62,548 a year to do work that actually means something. We believe in giving you the space to grow, experiment, and improve your craft. This isn’t just another remote gig—it’s a spot where you’ll shape stories that might change the way someone sees the world.
How We Work
Your workspace is yours—quiet, focused, free from distractions. We’re remote-first for a reason: deep work matters. There’s no parade of meetings, just real connections, async check-ins, and the occasional brainstorm that makes everyone laugh. Here, it’s about creating documentaries that awaken people, spark conversations, and foster empathy.
Let’s Make Something Powerful
If you get chills from a perfect montage or find yourself defending a story beat you believe in, you’ll fit right in. You want your edits to do more than inform—you want them to move people. If you’re ready to use your skills for impact (not just output), then this is your invitation. Your next great story could start with a single message. Let’s see where it goes.