This is exactly why I stopped participating in forums... You respond to a question and someone doesn't like the response, or wants to defend a particular, favorite app, tries to slide a comment by you to let you know you're less than informed, and the whole thing turns into an off-point, rambling mess.
The original question, posted by davidblumfeld, said he had a drive full of photos and videos that he needed to backup to another external hard drive. He did not indicate what Mac he's using and did indicate his current OS is OS X Mavericks (10.9.5), not El Capitan (10.11.3 being most current). However, he does note the subject software is Final Cut Pro X. That's an expensive app used for serious photo/video projects.
As you correctly point out, Duane, the original post does say, "I want an exact clone...," and asks about drag and drop or TimeMachine. I agree with your suggestions, as a, "clone," means to most of us an image (dmg--iso on some op systems), yet added some items from my recent experimentation with the latest version of CCC and another app/hardware solution called Pogoplug. I'm not crazy about either one and will say the solution depends entirely on what a user wants from a backup solution. Essentially, I'm not disagreeing with your suggestions, they're not a road I'd go down for the sort of stuff I do.
The entire topic of backing up work is even more important now than a few years ago when all we had to worry about mostly was hardware failure. An external backup of work files was pretty much all that was needed. Now the internet is loaded with some exquisite malware, ransome-ware and other garbage and, while the Mac OS has been very secure from all these, eventually some hacker or group of these weasel low-life characters will find a way in.
I think we all missed the point, and the discussion does merit discussion beyond the 'sound-bite' approach of television news. A comprehensive backup plan/strategy is an integral part of prudent data storage and protection. At this juncture, I recommend davidblumfeld implement Time Machine, if he has not already done so. It will back up the photos/videos on his Mac, and if he hasn't set it up, that's the first thing to do. Everything else is mostly secondary. Then there's Disk Doctor, a utility that's been with the Mac OS from the beginning of time. It's in the Utilities folder and that is inside the Applications folder. Disk Doctor will make a clone, compress it to save disk space, and check the integrity of the clone/backup. I think it's also possible to secure it with a password (I'm a little rusty on that point). Possibly, Time Machine and Disk Doctor are all the solution needed. Apps like CCC and others might be more than he needs. Thing is, with what little was provided in the original question it's difficult to tell.
Then, there's this... Current thought on the net and here in some of the forums is that a reliable backup plan now includes a local backup, as in clone, including setting up a USB thumb drive to boot a crashed drive or Mac in order to restore from a clone or other full backup, a copy of the clone image, files for the thumb drive and any really important files backed up individually all on cloud storage. Yes, that gets expensive especially if you choose iCloud. There are other clouds that are less expensive per Terabyte. Finally, if your data is really mission critical to your business, a rotating off-site copy of all backup files is recommended. Which you choose depends on the importance of your data to your or your business, how accessible you want any given file or set of project files to be, and the time you want to spend doing or managing scheduled backup routines.
Finally, the Mac OS and its utility apps are a blind spot for many Mac users. The industry has trained us to look outside the OS for solutions to lots of things from virus protection to backup software to do things already built into the op system. I'd advise the original questioner to look into the apps includes as utilities for solutions before branching out into other options that cost extra money. And then, after all the replies here, I think it's time for Mr. Blumfeld to weigh in on what he found helpful, and say thanks so the rest of us can go back to sleep. As for me, I'm done with this one until and unless Mr. Blumfeld comes back with something else on this.