I just hacked Seedance 2 pricing.
You can literally generate your videos way cheaper than Dreamina or any other platform.
This is a very random hack that I figured out few days ago, and it works flawlessly.
(you also don't need any subscription)
Here's the secret 👇
I keep getting messages from people asking:
"Okay, I learn AI animation... then what?"
Great question. Let me show you what I'm seeing.
Here's what's happening in the AI animation space right now:
The Creator Path:
People are building massive audiences on Youtube, X, IG, TikTok with content that spreads like a wildfire. I see creators going from zero to 50K+ followers by posting mind-blowing AI animations.
The Freelance Path:
The demand for AI videos is absolutely crazy right now. AI has become the hottest trend and now everyone wants AI content. Each week, I get 3–5 commission offers. That’s how hot the market is right now - and it’s only heating up.
The Corporate Path:
Companies are desperately promoting people who understand AI. They just can’t afford to lose them. I keep hearing stories of people getting raises just because they became the "AI person" at their company.
The IP Path:
The next South Park or Family Guy won’t come from a big studio - it’ll come from small team or solo creator using AI. In 1–2 years, this won’t be a dream, it’ll be the trend everyone’s talking about.
So no matter which path you choose, the opportunity is huge.
But here’s the frustrating part - 95% of people just consume AI content without actually creating anything.
They’re watching the opportunity of a lifetime from the sidelines while others learn AI skills and turn them into audiences, income, and careers.
And every day they wait, someone else is claiming everything that could have been theirs.
So the question is, will you keep watching, or start creating?
If you’re ready to start, that’s exactly what Cartoon Hero 3.0 is built for.
Cartoon Hero 3.0 course will take you from watching to creating - fast.
You’ll learn how to use the best AI workflows with ease, craft animations from scratch, and even bring your own stories to life.
By the end, you won’t just understand AI animation - you’ll be making stuff people can’t stop sharing.
The opportunity is here.
What you do with it is up to you.
Link in the comments.
“Perfection is achieved not when there is nothing more to add, but when there is nothing left to take away.” (Antoine de Saint-Exupéry)
Same applies to AI videos.
You don’t need longer videos. You need SHORTER ones that keep people emotionally engaged till the very end.
Reality check: An extraordinarily small percentage of artists will ever work on a handmade animated film from a major studio. You have a better chance of making it to the NFL. If you do work on one, it’s work-for-hire, which means you don’t own the IP. You get paid, and when the project is over, you’re laid off. If you’re lucky and the film does well, you get to work on the next one. There are only a handful of jobs available on these projects, so opportunities for new artists are rare.
Guillermo will get paid for his films until he dies. Most of the crew will get paid once and then hope they can find another job. My son started a stop-motion channel when he was 12. At 21, he gets paid every month from his library of 552 videos. He owns everything and has hard-earned skills.
Guillermo isn’t an animator, model builder, storyboard artist, or character designer. Disney couldn’t draw better than his worst artist. And that’s okay. They are master storytellers who use skills they don’t personally possess to realize their visions.
Here are your options if you have stories to tell through animation: start making films on your own. I don’t care what medium you use, including AI. Build a fan base that can support your work.
If you’re among the tiny fraction of artists who get a chance to work at a major studio, go in knowing that you’ll get paid and own nothing. Don’t act shocked when you’re laid off. Plan on adapting, and use your time at the studio as social capital. I still get a lot of mileage out of having worked on Space Jam.
Use AI as a force multiplier. Prove Guillermo wrong. Show that you can tell great stories using skills you don’t personally have, just like Disney and Guillermo. You now have the power of an entire studio on your computer, and everyone is underestimating you. Show them you’re making stories by humans, for humans.
You can die with the ideas in your head, or you can use AI to help bring them to life.
Whatever you choose to do, ignore the internet mob. They can’t tell stories better than you. They can’t draw. They can’t create characters. They’re not there on principle. It’s a social contagion. They all repeat the same chants and slogans they’ve been programmed to regurgitate. They won’t be there to pay your bills.
And if a big-shot director looks down on you, tell him his opinion might matter when he starts sharing the life-time profits from his movies with the crews who supplied the skills he didn’t have.
I have a motto.
Better done than perfect.
Because while you spend weeks perfecting, you're not creating anything else.
You're not improving. You’re not moving forward.
My best content?
Things I created fast.
Didn't think too much about it.
Just felt something, made it and posted it on X.
You can't predict what will work.
So there's no point in overthinking.
The more I overthought it, the worse the results got.
And here's something really important -
Your rough first animation has soul (yes, the one AI haters scream about)
Maybe even more soul than the "perfect" piece you make later.
So next time, when you create something new, go ahead and post it without overthinking
Be the action taker, and you will always win.
Duolingo couldn’t teach me English in 4 years.
ChatGPT helped me improve it in just 30 days.
For free.
Here are the 8 exact prompts I used 👇
(Save this — your English could completely change 🧵)
The technical barrier is disappearing fast.
What matters now is your direction, your taste and story.
AI can generate almost anything, but it still can’t replace your vision.
The smartest thing a solo creator can do right now is build original IP across multiple formats.
A short film becomes a series.
The series builds a world.
The world generates a community.
The community funds the next project.
Grok just made video extensions way smarter.
It now sees your original prompt and clip, so extensions continue naturally with consistent audio.
Here's how to try it right now:
• open Grok Imagine in the app or on web
• generate your video clip
• hit extend and it picks up exactly where you left off
done. no more awkward cuts or audio mismatches between clips.
Seedance 2.0 Omni-ref → a cheat code for consistency 🔓
Choose any input - image or video.
Build your story - frame to frame aligned.
Short tutorial below👇
Seedance 2.0 is everywhere right now. Every influencer is posting about it. Every platform is launching it.
Before you spend a dollar, read this thread. It might save you a lot of money🧵👇
2. Modifying Video Frames with VFX
Extract a still of the first frame, along with any other frames from scenes that require a VFX upgrade, and process them using Nano Banana Pro.
Prompt 1: Create blue anime light VFX around the left fist in the image of the boy. Use the VFX style from image 2 to create the effect.
Prompt 2: Color grade image 1 to match the style of image 2. Add VFX in the style of image 3.
Prompt 3: Apply modern and enhanced compositing to image 1, incorporating gradients, light diffusion, ambient light, color grading, and glow. Add a dazzling sunlight in the background. Use image 2 as a reference. Add a lens flare effect. Keep the original color palette.
Seedance 2.0 - Advanced Workflow Series
5. Replicate Animations with Video References
Remove the randomness from specific actions using reference animations and videos.
Workflow 👇