Linear storytelling is dying. The future is interactive. Platforms are experimenting with "choose your own adventure" narratives (e.g., Bandersnatch) and live events inside video games (e.g., Travis Scott’s Fortnite concert drew 27 million people). Popular media is becoming a playground, not a lecture hall.
As AI-generated video improves and interactive narratives (like Black Mirror: Bandersnatch) evolve, the next phase will be hyper-personalized entertainment. Soon, you won't watch a generic rom-com; you will watch a rom-com where the lead actor looks like your high school crush and the soundtrack is generated by your Spotify history. AnalTherapyXXX.23.07.13.Kendra.Heart.Plan.A.XXX...
AI will not replace writers, but it will replace the toil. Imagine generating a crowd of 10,000 unique digital extras in a medieval battle, or AI dubbing an actor’s voice into 50 languages in real time (synchronized to lip movements). More controversially, deepfake technology will allow "de-aging" and posthumous performances, raising massive ethical questions about likeness rights. Linear storytelling is dying
Linear storytelling is dying. The future is interactive. Platforms are experimenting with "choose your own adventure" narratives (e.g., Bandersnatch) and live events inside video games (e.g., Travis Scott’s Fortnite concert drew 27 million people). Popular media is becoming a playground, not a lecture hall.
As AI-generated video improves and interactive narratives (like Black Mirror: Bandersnatch) evolve, the next phase will be hyper-personalized entertainment. Soon, you won't watch a generic rom-com; you will watch a rom-com where the lead actor looks like your high school crush and the soundtrack is generated by your Spotify history.
AI will not replace writers, but it will replace the toil. Imagine generating a crowd of 10,000 unique digital extras in a medieval battle, or AI dubbing an actor’s voice into 50 languages in real time (synchronized to lip movements). More controversially, deepfake technology will allow "de-aging" and posthumous performances, raising massive ethical questions about likeness rights.