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A 75-year-old’s honest take on the video editor taking over social media
I’m scrolling through TikTok, Instagram, and YouTube—everywhere I look, creators are using CapCut.
Creators are using CapCut to create videos that have smooth transitions. Perfect cuts. CapCut automatically generates captions that scroll across the screen.
I kept wondering: Is CapCut actually useful, or is it just free?
I’d tried other editors before:
But one feature kept popping up in every CapCut tutorial I watched:
Auto-captions.
The term “auto-captions” does not refer to two separate words.
One hyphenated word.
Auto-captions.
That feature alone has saved me dozens of hours.
And yes, CapCut is free. Yes, it has a moderately easy learning curve. Yes, the main screen is overwhelming at first.
But auto-captions?
That’s what sold me.
I didn’t ease into CapCut with a simple “welcome to my channel” intro.
I jumped straight into the deep end:
Project 1: Canva Thumbnail Tutorial
Project 2: Canva Background Removal Tutorial

These weren’t practice runs.
These were real YouTube tutorials I was publishing to grow my channel.
CapCut had to deliver—and it did.
I rate CapCut’s learning curve at 7.5 out of 10 in terms of difficulty.
It’s not the easiest tool I’ve learned, as that distinction goes to ElevenLabs.
Since OBS Studio holds that title, it’s not the most difficult tool I’ve learned.
But 7.5 is real.
The main CapCut screen is overwhelming.
Tracks everywhere. Menus stacked on menus. The icons don’t always make sense immediately.

Opening a file didn’t always put it where I expected it to go.
I’d click “import,” and the video would land in some random spot instead of the timeline.
It took me about 45 minutes to 1 hour to feel comfortable navigating the Interface.
The installation wizard? Dead simple.
Please download, install, and open CapCut!
No complicated setup. No accounts to create immediately. No “choose your workspace configuration” nonsense.
CapCut… works.
Did I watch tutorials first?
Nope.
I’m 75 years old. I’ve been using computers since desktop support was a thing.
I dove in.
Trial and error. Click around. Break things. Figure it out.
Looking back? I should have watched a couple of tutorials.
Finding the hidden basic features would have saved me 60 minutes of confusion.
However, my learning style necessitates a practical, hands-on approach.
Here’s my complete video creation process:
For a 2-minute finished video, I typically need 45 minutes to 1 hour of editing after importing all the elements.
Editing can take anywhere from 45 minutes to 1 hour.
That’s with my current skill level.
Could you let me know how long it initially took me to begin editing? It likely took me more than two hours to complete the same video.
I work on a Dell desktop running Windows 11 with three monitors.
Why does this matter?
Because I can keep three windows open simultaneously:
Could you use CapCut on a single monitor?
Absolutely.
But if you’re serious about content creation, multiple monitors are a game-changer.
CapCut works smoothly across all three screens—no lag, no interface issues.
Let me check ALL the boxes here:
✅ Interface confusing at first? YES
✅ Features you couldn’t find? YES
✅ Export times too long? YES
✅ File size issues? YES
✅ Audio sync problems? YES
However, the most significant source of frustration lies elsewhere.
The most time-consuming and challenging aspect of video editing in CapCut, or any other editor, is lining up track corrections.
Audio sync issues:

Multiple track alignment:
Cutting/trimming precision:
This is where those 15 minutes of “clicking around” happen when I’m cleaning up auto-captions.
I forget where specific tools are. I have to hunt through menus.
That’s an inexperienced thing.
The more you use CapCut, the faster this gets.
However, the initial stages can be challenging. It’s frustrating.
Despite the frustrations, CapCut delivered some “WOW, that was easy!” moments:
I thought this would be complicated—sliders, decibel levels, and confusing technical terms.
Nope.
Simple volume controls. Visual waveforms. Easy fade-in/fade-out.
I could see what I was doing as I adjusted it.
Starting a new project? Ridiculously easy.
Pick your resolution (I use 1920×1080 for YouTube).
Import files.
Start editing.
There are no complex “project settings” to configure beforehand.
Let’s talk about why I upgraded to CapCut Pro almost immediately.
The accuracy rate is approximately 90%.
For a 2-minute video, I spend roughly 15 minutes cleaning up captions.
What does CapCut get wrong?
But 90% accuracy means I’m not typing captions from scratch.
I’m just fixing a handful of mistakes.

Without CapCut’s auto-captioning, I’d be spending hours manually typing and syncing captions.
Alternatively, I could hire someone else to create the captions.
Alternatively, I could skip adding captions altogether, which would result in losing viewers.
Auto-captions alone justify the CapCut Pro upgrade.
I started with CapCut Free.
I upgraded to CapCut Pro within hours.
Honestly? Yes.
The watermark alone was a dealbreaker for me.
I’m building a professional brand. I’m promoting affiliate products. I’m trying to establish credibility as someone who teaches AI tools to creators over 50.
A CapCut watermark on my videos screams “beginner” or “I couldn’t afford the upgrade.”
I would rather not convey either of those messages.
For me? Absolutely.
The cost is minimal compared to:
I’m still using CapCut Pro exclusively.
I have no intention of switching to any other editing software.
I’ve used desktop support for years. I’ve seen Premiere Pro, Final Cut Pro, and DaVinci Resolve—the “professional” editors.
CapCut is:
What CAN’T CapCut do that I wish it could?
Honestly? At this point, CapCut has done everything I wanted to do on a video editing level.
I’m creating:
CapCut handles all of it.
Yes.
I’ve already published several YouTube videos edited entirely in CapCut.
No one has commented, “This looks amateur,” or “You should upgrade your editor.”
The content quality matters more than the editing software.
Probably when you’re doing:
Is CapCut suitable for YouTube, social media, online courses, and affiliate marketing content?
You probably won’t outgrow CapCut.
Absolutely.
It’s the best video editing tool for beginners I’ve seen.
The learning curve is “reasonable”—not easy, but achievable.
Yes, with one caveat:
You need basic computer and organizational skills.
If you can:
You can use CapCut.
Get a little instruction.
Don’t make my mistake of diving in completely blind.
Watch 2-3 beginner CapCut tutorials on YouTube before you start your first project.
It’ll save you hours of frustration.
Yes. Two big ones:
These aren’t dealbreakers.
These are simply considerations to keep in mind.
I dove in blind. It worked, but I wasted time.
Save yourself the frustration: Watch 2-3 beginner tutorials on YouTube before starting your first project.
You’ll learn:
Seriously.
I see creators manually typing captions or skipping them entirely.
CapCut auto-generates captions in seconds.
Yes, you’ll need to clean them up.
But you’re editing, not typing from scratch.
This feature alone is worth the price of CapCut Pro.
My hand tremors make precise mouse clicking difficult.
Keyboard shortcuts save me:
Learn these early. They speed up your workflow significantly.
Create folders for each project:
YouTube Video - CapCut Tutorial/
├── Raw Footage (OBS recordings)
├── Voiceovers (ElevenLabs audio)
├── Graphics (Canva exports)
└── Music (background tracks)
When everything’s organized, importing to CapCut is smooth.
When files are scattered across your desktop? Chaos.
Although CapCut auto-saves your work, it is essential not to rely solely on this feature.
Ctrl+S after every major edit.
I haven’t lost work yet, but I’m not taking chances.
Flawless integration.
I export MP3s from ElevenLabs and import them into CapCut, and it just works.
No format conversion needed. No audio quality loss.
Export PNG or MP4 from Canva, and import to CapCut—no issues.
CapCut has a “YouTube” export preset.
Click it. Export. Upload.
Done.
There is no need to configure codecs, bitrates, or resolutions manually.
None.
CapCut handles:
Everything I’ve thrown at it has imported successfully.
Smooth interfaces across three monitors.
No lag. There are no peculiar scaling problems. No crashes.
CapCut respects my multi-monitor workspace perfectly.
I plan to continue using CapCut for the foreseeable future.
It does everything I need:
Maybe.
But honestly?
I would only switch if the new product came with a free technician who could read my mind.
That’s how comfortable I’ve become with CapCut.
Learning a new editor means:
I’m staying put unless CapCut lacks a compelling feature that would make me switch.
Right now, what would motivate me to switch? Not much.
Maybe if I start doing
What about affiliate marketing, YouTube tutorials, and online courses?
CapCut is my editor.
Not yet.
I’m still mastering the basics:
Once I’m consistently producing polished videos in under 45 minutes?
Then I’ll explore:
But first, I need to master the fundamentals.
Yes.
CapCut is the best video editing tool for beginners that I’ve encountered.
It’s not the easiest (7.5/10 learning curve).
But it’s powerful enough to produce professional-looking content without overwhelming you with complexity.
Absolutely.
If a 75-year-old person with hand tremors can learn to use CapCut and publish YouTube tutorials, then you can too.
Just remember:
Essential tool.
You need video content for:
CapCut lets you create that content without:
Auto-captions alone make CapCut worth the investment.
For beginners and intermediate creators? Yes.
It’s easier to learn, cheaper, and perfectly adequate for social media and YouTube content.
For professional video editors? Probably not.
Premiere Pro and Final Cut offer more advanced features, better color grading, and industry-standard workflows.
But here’s the thing:
Your audience doesn’t care what editor you used.
They care about:
CapCut delivers on all of that.
If you’re a content creator—especially over 50—who needs to edit videos for
✅ YouTube tutorials
✅ Online courses
✅ Facebook/Instagram ads
✅ Social media content
✅ Affiliate marketing
Start with CapCut.
Yes, the Interface is overwhelming at first.
Yes, there’s a learning curve (7.5/10).
Yes, lining up tracks is frustrating.
But the auto-captions feature alone saves dozens of hours.
And at 75 years old, with hand tremors and limited technical patience, I’m creating professional-looking videos that:
If I can do it, you can too.
👉 Download CapCut here: CapCut
My recommendation:
The free version is excellent for testing.
But if you’re building a professional brand, the Pro upgrade is worth it.
Remember:
We were raised in an immediate gratification society, but don’t let that frustrate you.
Take your time until you get what you want.
(The Gospel according to Santa 1:1)
And for those wondering, when will you outgrow CapCut and switch to something else?
Only if the new product comes with a free technician who can read your mind. 😂
75 years of not cowering,
Richie
Professional Santa | AI Tools Educator | OneAIHustle.ai
Have you tried CapCut? What’s your biggest editing frustration? Did auto-captions save your life, too?
Drop a comment below—I read every one!
If this review was beneficial to you, consider sharing it with another content creator over 30 who is apprehensive about video editing.
We’re never too old to learn new technology. 🎅🎥
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