@DeryaTR_@Kling_ai For sure. Interesting times. For decades, the film and television industry has been a gate-kept arena. If you didn’t graduate from a particular school, live in a particular city, or speak a particular dialect, your odds of making it were slim. AI is changing that.
@techhalla I totally get you. It's all change. In the early days of cinema, making a film required geography, money, and access. If you didn’t live near L.A or London, if you didn’t have the right background or connections, if you weren’t from “the industry”—you probably didn’t make movies.
@minchoi Great examples. If this goes well it isn’t just a new toolset, it’s a redistribution of creative power. And that should matter. Especially in an industry historically shaped by nepotism, location bias, and legacy privilege.
@saoulidisg @alanxtruc Good insight. Are you concerned about the collapse of mid-tier creative companies though? Sure, AI is enabling indie creators and top-tier studios, but it's squeezing the middle market.
@EHuanglu Good example of increased access for outsiders. AI lowers the barrier to entry—meaning people without funding, formal training, or connections can prototype ideas, build pitches, and produce. This is especially important in an industry dominated by class, geography, and nepotism.