ffmpeg -i you.s02e05.mkv -c:v libx264 -c:a aac you.s02e05.mp4 Take a frame at 00:15:30 and save as JPEG:
ffmpeg -ss 00:15:30 -i you.s02e05.mkv -frames:v 1 -q:v 2 you.s02e05_thumb.jpg If you have you.s02e01.mkv … you.s02e10.mkv , compress all:
for f in you.s02e*.mkv; do ffmpeg -i "$f" -c:v libx264 -crf 23 "${f%.mkv}_compressed.mp4" done Delay audio by 0.5 seconds: you s02e05 ffmpeg
ffmpeg -i you.s02e05.mkv -vn -c:a copy you.s02e05_audio.aac Check track numbers with ffmpeg -i file.mkv . Suppose video track #0, audio #1, subtitles #2. Remove subtitles:
If you have a video file named something like You.S02E05.mkv or you.s02e05.mp4 , ffmpeg is the go‑to command‑line tool to inspect, convert, trim, compress, or extract audio from that episode. ffmpeg -i you
ffmpeg -i you.s02e05.mkv -itsoffset 0.5 -i you.s02e05.mkv -map 1:v -map 0:a -c copy you.s02e05_fixed.mkv If you want a good balance of size, quality, and device compatibility:
ffprobe -v quiet -print_format json -show_streams you.s02e05.mkv Extract a 60‑second clip starting at 10 minutes 30 seconds: compress all: for f in you.s02e*.mkv
ffmpeg -i you.s02e05.mkv Even without output, ffmpeg prints stream information: video codec (h264, h265), audio channels, subtitle tracks, duration, bitrate.