Bob's Burgers Ffmpeg [OFFICIAL]
Neither activity makes rational sense. Both are acts of love. So the next time you see a forum post titled “Help: Bob’s Burgers S04E01 has duplicate frames after handbrake” , smile. Someone out there is fighting the good fight—preserving the subtle bounce of Louise’s bunny ears, the exact rhythm of Gene’s farting synth, and the warm, orange tint of the restaurant’s fluorescent lights.
The user described how a particular shot—where Bob’s face warps in slow motion due to a bad broadcast master—could be repaired with FFmpeg’s minterpolate filter to synthesize new, smoother frames. Another user countered with a mpdecimate filter chain to remove the duplicates instead. bob's burgers ffmpeg
At first glance, the warm, hand-drawn, slightly greasy world of Bob’s Burgers —featuring the Belcher family’s punny burger specials and Gene’s synthesizer riffs—has absolutely nothing to do with FFmpeg , the cold, command-line behemoth used by developers to convert, stream, and manipulate video files. Neither activity makes rational sense
The Belchers are scrappy, DIY, and determined to do things right despite the odds. FFmpeg users are scrappy, DIY, and determined to process video right despite the complexity. There’s a philosophical alignment. Bob wakes up at 4 AM to grind fresh meat for his burgers. The FFmpeg user wakes up at 4 AM to re-encode a season of Bob’s Burgers with the libx265 codec to save 300MB of disk space. Someone out there is fighting the good fight—preserving
And they’re doing it one FFmpeg flag at a time.
And yet, search Reddit, GitHub, or the darker corners of the r/datahoarder forums, and you’ll find them together: “How to deinterlace Bob’s Burgers with FFmpeg” or “FFmpeg command to remove 3:2 pulldown from Bob’s Burgers rips.”
Please wait
There is a