ffmpeg -i s03e03.mkv -af "pan=mono|FC=FC" -t 45 beth_therapy.wav Now I have a clean, isolated vocal track—ready to be remixed into a lo-fi beat. “Therapy vibes to process your parents’ divorce to.” Let’s turn Pickle Rick vs. Rats into a high-quality GIF (because Twitter loves 15fps loops of mayhem):
As a developer, I couldn’t just watch Pickle Rick fight a swarm of rats in a sewer. I had to inspect it. So I fired up the Swiss Army knife of video manipulation: . rick and morty s03e03 ffmpeg
ffmpeg -i s03e03.mkv -ss 00:15:20 -t 4 -vf "fps=12,scale=480:-1:flags=lanczos,split[s0][s1];[s0]palettegen[p];[s1][p]paletteuse" pickle_rat_fight.gif Yes, that’s a 2-step palette generation. Yes, it’s worth it. The resulting GIF is crisp, small, and captures the exact moment a pickle stabs a rat with a toothbrush shank. At one point, my download had a glitch—3 corrupted frames during the “post-credit scene with the kids in the car.” FFmpeg to the rescue: ffmpeg -i s03e03
Now pass me the -filter_complex documentation. Want to try this yourself? Download the episode legally, then run any of the above commands. Just don’t blame me if your terminal starts burping. I had to inspect it
ffmpeg -i broken_s03e03.mkv -c copy -bsf:v h264_mp4toannexb -f mpegts fixed.ts ffmpeg -i fixed.ts -c copy repaired.mkv Bitstream filtering. It’s not time travel, but it’s close. Using FFmpeg on Pickle Rick felt weirdly appropriate. The show is about taking a familiar form (a cartoon, a sitcom) and twisting it with science. FFmpeg does the same: it takes raw video streams and twists them into GIFs, thumbnails, clips, and audio stems.