This generates a synthetic noise video with matching noise audio, similar to what was historically seen on analog televisions tuned to a channel with no broadcast signal.
The generator produces a predefined clip consisting of visual noise, also known as “snow,” and broadband noise sound.
This is a generator, not a filter. The result is a self-contained clip that can be placed on the timeline from the preview player or directly placed on the timeline from the generator.
What TV noise is (historical context)
In the analog television era, a TV not receiving a valid broadcast signal would display random noise:
-
Visual noise (“snow”)
Caused by thermal noise and random electromagnetic interference picked up by the tuner. -
Audio noise
Broadband hiss resulting from the absence of a modulated audio carrier.
This noise was not generated intentionally by broadcasters; it was the raw output of the receiver when no signal was present.
Viewers commonly saw and heard this:
- After broadcast hours
- On unused channels
- When reception was poor
- When an antenna was disconnected
Why this noise existed
Analog TV receivers amplified whatever signal they could detect.
When no structured signal was present, they amplified random electrical noise, making it visible and audible.
This made “static” a familiar indicator of:
- No transmission
- Signal loss
- Tuning between channels
Generator behavior in Shotcut
- Produces a fixed-duration clip (video + audio)
- Video and audio noise are continuous and uncorrelated
- The clip can be trimmed, looped, or extended like any other media
- The generated noise is synthetic and repeatable
Visual characteristics
- High-frequency black-and-white noise
- Fine-grain texture
- May appear slightly patterned or structured at close inspection
Note:
Adding a very small Blur: Gaussian (≈ 1%) removes visible patterning and produces a more natural analog-style noise appearance.
Audio characteristics
- Broadband noise (hiss-like)
- No pitch, rhythm, or tonal structure
- Constant level over time
This closely resembles analog TV static rather than digital white noise used in audio testing.
Contemporary use
Today, noise generators are used almost exclusively for historical, symbolic, or stylistic purposes.
Common modern uses include:
- Intro or outro visuals referencing analog television
- Transitions indicating loss of signal or interruption
- Documentary or archival storytelling
- Retro or broadcast-era aesthetics
- Simulating “dead air” or system failure
They are not used for technical testing in modern digital workflows.
Recommended use cases
- Creating a “no signal” or “broadcast interruption” effect
- Evoking analog-era television
- Background texture for glitch or degradation effects
- Sound design for interruption or uncertainty
Limitations
- Not true analog noise (digital approximation)
- No parameter control within the generator itself
- Fixed initial duration
- Not suitable for audio calibration or measurement
