It is not practical for TeachJuice.com to directly transcribe multimedia because transcription at scale requires heavy compute, ongoing infrastructure costs, and constant handling of changing media formats across platforms, which would slow down the core mission of reliable teach-vs-sales analysis.
NotebookLM works well for TeachJuice users who want the fastest path to a transcript before using the analyzer, but it does not seem to reliably recognize Facebook videos, so it is best used when your source content is hosted elsewhere.
Fusion Scribe is the most robust option in this list for TeachJuice workflows, and it does not seem to have trouble extracting text from either audio or video; while there is a nominal one-time fee, it also includes higher-value features like bulk transcriptions and translations into over 200 languages.
ChatGPT can transcribe content and there are Custom GPTs specifically aimed at transcribing YouTube videos, which can help TeachJuice users get source text quickly, but in practice these tools are often unreliable and can produce inconsistent results across different media.
The Tactiq tool at https://tactiq.io/tools/run/youtube_transcript works for TeachJuice because, as of the time of this writing, it can extract YouTube videos quickly and does not require a login.
For the biggest bang-for-the-buck, FusionScribe offers the best overall combination of reliability and features, and it goes beyond simple transcription by supporting broader, scalable content workflows.