How to Film a Professional Podcast: A Complete Beginner's Guide

By Alberta Film School · April 21, 2026 · videography

Video podcasts aren't just trending — they're the standard now. If your podcast doesn't have a video component, you're leaving half your audience on the table.

But filming a podcast is different from filming anything else. The cameras run for hours. The lighting needs to be consistent. The audio has to be perfect. And you need to make it all look effortless.

Here's how to do it right.

Why Video Podcasts Win

Audio-only podcasts still have their place, but video podcasts get:

If you're starting a podcast in 2026, start with video from day one.

The Multi-Cam Setup

A single camera works, but multi-cam is what separates amateur from professional.

Two-Camera Setup (Minimum)

Three-Camera Setup (Ideal)

You don't need expensive cinema cameras. A mirrorless camera like a Sony a6400 or Canon M50 works perfectly. The key is matching your white balance and exposure across all cameras.

Lighting for Podcasts

Podcast lighting needs to be: - Consistent — you're recording for 30-60+ minutes - Flattering — soft light from the front, slightly above eye level - Not distracting — avoid harsh shadows or color temperature shifts

Two softbox lights or LED panels at 45-degree angles to each speaker is the standard setup. Add a subtle backlight or hair light to separate speakers from the background.

Pro tip: Avoid overhead room lights. They create unflattering shadows under the eyes and nose.

Audio Is Everything

Your podcast can have mediocre video and still succeed. But bad audio? People click away in seconds.

Budget-Friendly: USB Microphones

Professional: XLR Microphones

The Golden Rule

Get the microphone as close to the speaker's mouth as possible — 6 to 8 inches is ideal. The further away, the more room echo and background noise you'll pick up.

Editing Your Podcast

Multi-cam editing sounds intimidating, but it's straightforward once you learn the workflow:

  1. Sync all camera angles using audio waveforms
  2. Create a multi-cam sequence in Premiere Pro or DaVinci Resolve
  3. Cut between angles based on who's speaking
  4. Add your intro/outro graphics and music
  5. Export at 1080p minimum (4K if your cameras support it)

The editing is where you turn a raw conversation into a polished show. Cut out long pauses, "ums," and tangents. Keep the energy moving.

Getting Your Podcast Out There

Filming is only half the battle. Distribution matters:

Learn It All in One Day

At Alberta Film School's Podcasting Workshop, you'll set up a real multi-cam podcast studio, record an episode, and edit it — all in one day. No experience needed. AFS provides all the studio podcast equipment.

Workshop details: 1 day, 12:00 PM – 5:00 PM, $249 + GST. Join the waitlist to be the first to know when the next date is announced.