If you want to reconnect ALL the selected clips, click the All radio button at the top. The Relink window appears with the missing clips listed at the top. (If the off-line files are in the Event Browser, select the clips and choose File > Reconnect Event Files.
![imovie 10.1.2 stretches pictures imovie 10.1.2 stretches pictures](https://i.ytimg.com/vi/ND6_hB9Fqyk/sddefault.jpg)
Then, choose File > Reconnect Project Files. In either the Event Browser or the Timeline, select the clips that are off-line (red). In which case, you need to reconnect the links in Final Cut to the correct media. However, sometimes missing media is caused by renaming folders, turning off a hard disk, deleting the wrong data, or a host of other calamities. The key is to quit FCP X before moving folders. In the case of moving a folder, quit Final Cut, move the folder back into the Final Cut Events folder and restart FCP. Let FCP X (or Event Manager X, which is a separate utility) do all your media management. NOTE: The key rule for working with media in Final Cut Pro X is that once you import media, don’t move it or rename it. With the exception of accidentally switching to Proxy files – which you can fix by going back to Preferences > Editing and changing the preference setting back to Original/Optimized media – the rest of these problems can be solved by relinking.
![imovie 10.1.2 stretches pictures imovie 10.1.2 stretches pictures](https://i.ytimg.com/vi/uyJY7zMm-U4/mqdefault.jpg)
Sigh… You open Final Cut Pro and, suddenly, you’re seeing red in the Event Browser. One of the biggest frustrations with the initial version of Final Cut Pro was that if you lost the connection with your media, you were out of luck, as you couldn’t reconnect to it. [ Updated: July, 2014, with new features from the 10.1.2 FCP X updateĭec.
#Imovie 10.1.2 stretches pictures update
However, this update was never published.) (This article was first written as an update to my book: Final Cut Pro X – Making the Transition.