Information

The Strength of a Common Cause | Winner's Minute With Mac Hammond

Basic shortcuts

Ctrl + SSave subtitles
Ctrl + click
Double click
Edit highlighted caption
TabEdit next caption
Shift + TabEdit previous caption
EscLeave edit mode
Ctrl + SpacePlay / pause video
Ctrl + HomePlay selected caption
Ctrl + EnterSplit caption at cursor position
at current time

Advanced shortcuts

Ctrl + InsertAdd new caption
Ctrl + DeleteDelete selected caption
Ctrl + IEdit currently played segment
Shift + EnterNew line when editing
Ctrl + LeftPlay from -1s
Ctrl + RightPlay from +1s
Alt + LeftShift caption start time -0.1s
Alt + RightShift caption start time +0.1s
Alt + DownShift caption end time -0.1s
Alt + UpShift caption end time +0.1s

Annotation shortcuts

Ctrl + 1Hesitation
Ctrl + 2Speaker noise
Ctrl + 3Background noise
Ctrl + 4Unknown word
Ctrl + 5Wrong segment
Ctrl + 6Crosstalk segment
You are in the read-only mode. Close
00:06.4
00:12.3
President Franklin Roosevelt was president during one of the darkest times in America’s history.
00:12.4
00:19.3
Public sentiment was against joining another European war, but Roosevelt knew something had to change.
00:19.4
00:24.6
If America didn’t rise up, our existence as we knew it would be in jeopardy.
00:24.7
00:35.3
Roosevelt mobilized American sentiment and brought us together with a strength and unity that produced the greatest military and industrial efforts the world has ever seen.
00:35.4
00:43.5
He is an example of the types of leaders we need to elect this November: those who value and promote unity of effort.
00:43.6
00:53.5
They know strength doesn’t come through forcing our opinions on others, but through acting together for a common cause. I’m Mac Hammond, and this is the Winner’s Minute.