I'm late to y'all's party, but what the hell.
First things first: Editors are the most irritable, unpleasable people in the world. This is a fact. How do I know it's a fact? Because I am one.
Second thing: We are whining our asses off about some really stupid shit here. Oh, it says "Import iMovie events" when you first fire up the app, that means it's a toy for children. Come the fuck on. That's just petty and stupid.
But there's a third thing, and it's important: Lost in all our whining about stupid shit and just being generally disagreeable people is the fact that Final Cut Pro X has a number of crippling design flaws that cannot be worked around, handwaved away as "innovations," or fixed in a dot release.
I'm talking about things like project management. Final Cut Pro X doesn't have any. At all. Period. It has no bins. You want to organize your footage by putting shots in bins? Tough. You can't. You have to use annotations and canned searches. That's fine if you're cutting the video of little Timmy's third birthday party to post on Facebook for the grandparents, or if you're editing out the part of the gang-bang where your hot young wife got the shakes and had to lock herself in the bathroom for half an hour before she was ready to pull the rest of the train. But if you're doing a TVC — screw the really big jobs, the hourlong scripteds or the docos or the features, just a simple thirty-second spot — you're going to end up completely lost in a sea of 200 shots that you simply cannot organize because the program won't let you.
And that trackless "magnetic timeline" Apple thinks is such hot shit? It's a calamity. See, timelines have tracks for a reason. It's not just a thing that makes editing easier. It's necessary for collaborating with others. When you're done cutting that commercial you nearly killed yourself over because you couldn't get your shit organized, the first thing you have to do after picture lock is send an EDL to the transfer house so they can grade and transfer your selects. FCP X can't do that. It's not that the feature isn't there. It's that the program can't, because Apple in their infinite wisdom decided a magical trackless timeline was more important than being able to fit into existing and established post workflows.
"Oh, well, EDLs are obsolete, you should stop using them." Thanks, Apple. That really means a lot. I'm glad you think the most basic tool editors have is obsolete and should be forgotten. But screw that because it's not about EDLs. You also have to send an OMF or an AAF to your audio guys for mixing and VO recording, and you have to send an AAF or an XML to the online guys for finishing. Guess what? Can't do any of those things because fucking Apple doesn't think fucking tracks on the timeline are fucking important.
Yes, we're whining. Yes, we're unpleasable. But underneath all that, we've also got legitimate reasons why FCP X is not now and will never be usable for post-production.
"Everything changed in post," they said on Tuesday when they shipped it. Yeah, Apple. It sure did. Only not in the way you were expecting.
I've had a few other choice words to say on this subject. Anybody who gives a shit (which you shouldn't) can read them here.