If you move the playhead to the end of one clip and preview it you'll see that during playback, it will skip from this section to that section and you won't have that removed section included for each section. You can also type in the time code to get the exact place you want and in and outpoint if there's a highlighted section you'd like to remove completely, click the section and then delete. If you'd like to start over with the editor timeline, just click Reset timeline. Once you've removed all the sections and set the in and out points, click the export button in the top right. You can choose Video Quality up to 4K if you recorded in that resolution, you can normalize audio levels, enabling that toggle will try to make all the volume even across all of your guests. So if some guests had a lower volume than others, it will raise those and lower those who had a higher volume. If there was any background noise in the recording, you can try to remove that here on export. And you can choose to remove the Riverside watermark from your exported clip.
Then when you're ready, click Export. It will take a few minutes to process your clip and then you'll get an email when it's ready to download back on the recordings page. For this episode, you'll see that all the clips that we've edited in the past are still available to download. I can click the three dots on any of these clips, click Publish, and I can send it to something like Spotify or a podcast host like Transistor. I can download this clip again, preview it, rename it, duplicate it, or I can copy the ID if I need help from support. You can also delete this clip if you no longer need it. Saving these clips is a great way to create multiple short reels for tik tok or Instagram and then you can download them in the future and refer back to them. If you'd like to use a third party video editor like Adobe Premiere, you can choose the export option on the recordings page.