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  1. A lot of people think it fills out the screen nicer than having just video in the middle then black bars on the sides. If the blurry part wasn't there it will still not fill up the screen. The problem is from people shooting vertical videos, not really the blurry edge parts.

  2. Mar 1, 2018 · The culprit is smartphones. We now watch more video on our mobile gadgets than we do on TVs and computers. And guess what? A phone's screen has portrait orientation—a tall, thin rectangle.

  3. May 28, 2022 · TikTok flip your videos so they are a more accurate representation of you. When taking a photo or video using your front camera, your phone flips your face. Your phone automatically vertically flips the view. So, your left side, suddenly becomes your right.

  4. In most contexts, e.g. those where there is no possibility of ambiguity since only magazine are used, or the participants are talking about a video game, it is not important. This is probably why clip has come to be used as a slang term for magazine.

  5. May 21, 2015 · It's modified because the video was shot in a vertical position rather than horizontal. The blurry bars on the edges are just post-processing of the same video playing in the center, split in two to fill either side of the frame to fulfil the required aspect ratio of the broadcast.

  6. Sep 24, 2017 · It is possible that the rotated video exceeds the capabilities of your TV. The rotation changed the resolution from 1920x1080 to 1080x1920. If your TV is 1080p (full HD) it supports 1,920x1,080, and if only 720p then 1,280x720. In both cases, the video height is more than the maximum.

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  8. To rotate your video, drag the rotation slider left or right to align with the orientation or final angle you want the video clip to appear in. You’ll notice from the screenshots that we’ve rotated the video from its original horizontal orientation to become vertical.