Table of Contents

Censoring

The process of censoring objects within a video is a post-processing operation that takes place after the video has been recorded. Censoring can be effectuated using any effect that makes the object to be censored barely visible - this ranges from using a blurring effect and up to just a solid color, both of which can be overlaid on top of the objective to be censored. In case the objective moves, the difficultly in censoring consists in manually applying adjustments using keyframes for the duration of the video clip to ensure that the objective remains censored as it moves.

The recipe to censor objects within a video consists in:

Choice of Censoring Effect

The habit of the trade is to use a blurring effect that makes the objective barely visible, however, as mentioned a black block is also perfectly valid for censoring, with the difference between the two being that the blurring effect provides more contextual information about the objective and the area around the objective, which might be necessary depending on context.

For example, imagine having to censor all individuals in a video clip during a shootout where it is preferable to see the guns being fired but it is additionally necessary to censor the people firing the guns. In the former case, a big block of a solid color would not provide the information that someone is shooting, such that just blurring the individuals a whole is a better strategy.

Exercise

The task is to censor the "stranger" from "Color Classics - The Little Stranger" cartoon (produced by Fleischer Studios for Paramount Pictures) for a sub-segment of the entire original videoclip (for brevity).

Result

Realization using Premiere Pro

with the following project files:

Here are some observation regarding the realization: