- Docs
- Podcasts & Episodes
- Using the Script Editor
Using the Script Editor
The script editor is where you refine your AI-generated episode script: editing text, reassigning hosts, and managing music and pronunciations.
Overview#
When an episode has a generated script, the Episode Script panel displays it in a structured, editable format. The script is organized into chapters, each containing speech blocks assigned to individual hosts.
Script Structure#
Chapters#
Each chapter displays a numbered label (e.g., "Chapter 1", "Chapter 2") and an editable title underneath. Chapters group related speech blocks together, giving your episode clear sections.
Speech Blocks#
Speech blocks are the individual lines of dialogue within each chapter. Each block shows:
- A host name label above the text (clickable to change host or speed)
- The block's text content, which you can click into and edit directly
- A Regenerate Audio button that appears on hover (if audio has been generated)
The Toolbar#
The toolbar sits at the top of the script editor. It contains:
- Add Music dropdown (left side): add intro, outro, or background music to your episode
- Pronunciation Guide button (right side): open the pronunciation guide to fix mispronounced words
- Import/Export menu (right side, three-dot icon): import an existing script or export the current one
Editing Text#
Click into any speech block to start editing. The editor uses TipTap, a rich text editor, so editing feels like working in a standard document. Changes are auto-saved as you type.
Chapter titles are also editable. Click the title text at the top of any chapter and type a new name.
The script auto-saves after each edit with a short debounce delay. If you navigate away mid-edit, pending changes are flushed automatically.
Frequently Asked Questions#
Does editing the script cost credits?
No. All script editing, rewriting, and regeneration is completely free. Credits are only consumed when you publish or download the final episode.
Can I rearrange chapters in the script editor?
The script editor lets you edit text within chapters and speech blocks. To reorder the audio segments, use the timeline editor where you can drag and drop segments into any order.