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Ne-Yo Explores AI Music Ethics

Key Points

  • The conversation frames AI as a powerful tool whose impact depends on how it’s applied, noting both its creative potential and ethical complexities.
  • Grammy‑winning artist Ne‑Yo shares his long‑standing passion for video games, coding, and technology, explaining how these interests evolved from a therapeutic hobby into deeper technical involvement.
  • Ne‑Yo emphasizes that he isn’t anti‑AI but wants clearer examples of its positive uses, highlighting his intrigue and cautious optimism about AI’s future role.
  • He expresses unease about AI‑generated music that imitates his songwriting style and voice without his consent, underscoring concerns about personal ownership and misuse of generative AI.

Sections

Full Transcript

# Ne-Yo Explores AI Music Ethics **Source:** [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pxlAhUinl9o](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pxlAhUinl9o) **Duration:** 00:30:17 ## Summary - The conversation frames AI as a powerful tool whose impact depends on how it’s applied, noting both its creative potential and ethical complexities. - Grammy‑winning artist Ne‑Yo shares his long‑standing passion for video games, coding, and technology, explaining how these interests evolved from a therapeutic hobby into deeper technical involvement. - Ne‑Yo emphasizes that he isn’t anti‑AI but wants clearer examples of its positive uses, highlighting his intrigue and cautious optimism about AI’s future role. - He expresses unease about AI‑generated music that imitates his songwriting style and voice without his consent, underscoring concerns about personal ownership and misuse of generative AI. ## Sections - [00:00:00](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pxlAhUinl9o&t=0s) **Ne‑Yo Discusses AI, Gaming, Creativity** - The host introduces Grammy‑winning artist Ne‑Yo to explore how generative AI’s promise and ethical concerns intersect with his passion for video games and technology, which he uses as a creative therapy alongside his music career. - [00:03:03](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pxlAhUinl9o&t=183s) **AI Music Mimicry Raises Ethics** - The speaker notes how convincingly AI can imitate an artist’s voice, compares the upcoming disruption to Napster’s impact, and urges proactive ethical and legal safeguards as AI reshapes song creation and collaboration. - [00:06:06](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pxlAhUinl9o&t=366s) **Ne-Yo Emphasizes Authentic Live Tour** - Ne‑Yo assures fans his upcoming world tour will showcase his real, unaltered performances—no holograms or AI—while reflecting on his current views about artificial intelligence. - [00:09:12](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pxlAhUinl9o&t=552s) **VFX Veteran Reacts to AI** - A seasoned visual‑effects professional expresses amazement at the emotional power of generative AI and deepfake technology, recounts his shift from traditional VFX work, and asks how such systems are built. - [00:12:20](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pxlAhUinl9o&t=740s) **Real-Time AI Performance & Deepfake Debate** - The speaker explains AI‑driven live rendering in performance, condemns the loaded term “deepfake,” and reflects on the technology’s transformative potential alongside its ethical pitfalls. - [00:15:27](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pxlAhUinl9o&t=927s) **Ethics of AI-Generated Likenesses** - A speaker reflects on two decades of creating CGI celebrity replicas, recalls a 2009 TED talk on the same ethical concerns, and argues that AI‑driven likenesses require fresh thinking and self‑regulation. - [00:18:34](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pxlAhUinl9o&t=1114s) **Convincing Celebs to Trust AI** - A speaker discusses the necessity of regulations and outlines how they persuade high‑profile actors such as Brad Pitt and Tom Hanks to safely adopt expensive AI likeness‑capture technology. - [00:21:44](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pxlAhUinl9o&t=1304s) **Digital Disruption as Creative Fuel** - The speaker discusses how the rise of CGI and game‑engine technology has transformed filmmaking—making half of movies computer‑generated, demanding massive teams and resources—yet frames these tools as a “jet‑fuel” amplifier that can boost artistic creativity rather than merely shortcut it. - [00:24:52](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pxlAhUinl9o&t=1492s) **Navigating Ethics in Generative AI** - The speaker reflects on the challenges of setting moral, legal, and artistic boundaries for AI‑generated digital personas, noting rapid technological change, evolving distribution models, and emerging business opportunities. - [00:27:53](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pxlAhUinl9o&t=1673s) **AI Empowering Filmmakers' Vision** - The speaker celebrates how emerging AI tools are unlocking creative potential for directors, production designers, and visual effects artists, rapidly reshaping the future of cinematic world‑building. ## Full Transcript
0:00I personally feel the AI situation is about what it's going to be used for. 0:05You know, it's 0:06I understand it's the future and it's not going anywhere anytime soon. 0:09And I'm not anti AI. 0:11I just need someone to show me the positive aspects of this AI thing. 0:17Generative AI offers great power, and the great unknown. 0:21While being transported into new realms of creativity is awe-inspiring, 0:25generative AI is also seen as an ethical minefield. 0:29Today, we're talking about the amazing, uncanny, and sometimes eerie 0:33world of unreal reality in music, film, and your daily scroll. 0:38We're now extremely lucky 0:39to be joined by three time Grammy Award winning hitmaker Ne-Yo. 0:43Ne-Yo. Welcome. 0:44How you doing, brother? Hey. 0:46Well, look, one of the things that a lot of people 0:48might not know about you 0:49is that you've got a real passion for science and technology. 0:53So please, let's jump into that. 0:54I want to know where that comes from. 0:56Well, it all starts with video games. 0:59I've been a video game head for a really, really long time still am 1:02to this day is actually my my, my therapy. 1:05You know, when I need, when I need a break from the music industry. 1:08Normally, you can find me somewhere with my PlayStation just doing that. 1:11But, it started there, and then it started getting into the art 1:15of creating video games. 1:17And, you know, what it takes to to make the video games 1:20look the way they look and things of that nature. 1:21So it started there and then and then, you know, blossomed into more interest 1:26in the behind the scenes work of 1:27just what it is to create some of my favorite video games. 1:30And then it goes deeper than that into coding and all of those things. 1:33Actually, I invested in a coding school not too long ago, 1:37just just out of sheer passion for the knowledge of it. 1:40Yeah. So, so, yeah, that's that's where it starts. 1:42Well, it sounds like if you're interested in something, you go all in 1:46and you seem to take your passions and really turn that into something 1:49even greater than yourself. 1:50So let's pivot that to talking about AI some. 1:53Let's start off with the positive about that. 1:55What are you excited about in the space of AI? 1:59I personally feel the AI situation is about what it's going to be used for. 2:04You know, it's 2:05I understand it's the future and it's not going anywhere anytime soon. 2:08And I'm not anti AI. 2:10I just need someone to show me the positive aspects of this AI thing. 2:15You know, it kind of what sparked this whole thing is when somebody showed me 2:20an AI program 2:21that could not only attempt to write a song in the style of Ne-Yo, 2:25but then showed me another one they attempted to sing the song 2:28using my voice, and that just, that just, that didn't fly with me. 2:31I'm like, wait a minute. 2:32No one sees this as a threat at all? 2:34This doesn’t strike anybody is weird that there's a whole song here 2:39written in my style, singing my voice, and I had nothing to do with it? 2:42That's not weird to anybody else? 2:43So, I mean, that's that's, you know, that's kind of where I sit with it. 2:46Again, I'm waiting on someone to bring me the positive aspects of this whole 2:50AI thing in regards to music creation and, and the music industry, 2:54because as of right now, all I can kind of see is the red flags. 2:57Now, again, I'm 100% open to someone 3:00showing me the positive aspects of I just have yet to see them. 3:03Quick question then, 3:04when you did hear some of the songs that were created using this AI 3:07in this form of Ne-Yo, in the styling of Ne-Yo, what’d you think? 3:11Did it sound good? 3:12It didn't sound bad. 3:14No, it wasn't bad at all. 3:15The worst part about it is that again, it was my voice 3:19and a style similar to mine. 3:21You know, it was... 3:22a good impersonation, I’ll say. 3:23It was a it was a very good impersonation. 3:26But the reality is it wasn't me. 3:28Well, then let's stay in this space for a moment, 3:30because what you're talking about are really some true ethical 3:33considerations that a lot of us have about AI. 3:37So let's talk about some of those concerns. 3:38You remember Napster and then iTunes, and then when Spotify came on in 3:43and changed the music industry forever. 3:45Is it possible that gen AI is just the next reset? 3:49It's definitely possible. 3:50And, I think that it would be smart 3:52to get ahead of it as opposed to, you know, how it happened with Napster. 3:56You know, where, it had to be the whole lawsuit thing. 3:59And then all of a sudden that becomes the norm. 4:01Yeah, it would be smart to get in front of it. 4:03But, if AI is doing it all for you, what are you doing 4:06as the human being like? 4:07You know, nowadays, 4:08I got a question every song that comes across the table, because it could be 4:12it could be an AI that did it and it's like, okay, 4:15am I working with this songwriter or am I working with this machine? 4:18Again, great impersonations all day long. 4:21Yeah, fantastic. 4:22And that's great for, you know, the the fun element of it. 4:25It's fun to listen to SpongeBob SquarePants sing a TI song. 4:29Yeah. That's fun. 4:29Let’s like imagine a world where artists can protect 4:33or control their likeness while becoming still more efficient. 4:37Do you think that there's a possibility you can use AI to write your songs 4:41with you, and then you can go on vacation and then maybe, like, come back in 4:45and check it and give it some notes and then craft it together. 4:48To be completely honest, to me all that sounds like is artists getting lazy. 4:54It just 4:55it just sounds like it just sounds like an opportunity for an artist to get lazy. 4:59But Ne-Yo, when artists first experienced Pro Tools for the first time, 5:03do you think that they had a similar reaction? Because... 5:05I felt the same way. You did feel the same way. 5:07I felt the same way about Pro Tools. 5:08Again, there are people that spent years learning how to sing on key 5:13and now anybody can sing on key at the push of a button. 5:17Again, I'm not against technology. 5:20I'm not even against AI. 5:22AI is the next wave. 5:23It's not going anywhere, I get it, I understand that. 5:26I just need to know how I'm supposed to not feel threatened by a machine that’s 5:31going to come in and try to take away what it is that I that that I do. 5:33So let's take matrix out of the studio. Right. 5:36So I'm getting that, you know, you're not a huge fan of having 5:39AI really assist you in the studio just yet. 5:42But let's think about performance because I know you are also very known 5:46for your live performances. 5:48You've had different versions of yourself that you've tapped into 5:51for multiple albums. There have been multiple eras of Ne-Yo. 5:54What if you wanted to do 5:55sort of like a Ne-Yo eras show where it's you and then different versions of you, 5:59and we've got those other versions that we're using AI in order to generate. 6:02It could be cool, I guess. 6:04For something like that. 6:06Hold on! Did Ne-Yo just crack a little bit on AI? 6:08No, I didn’t. 6:10Because it’s, because it's still me. 6:11I appreciate just you being genuine and open 6:15and honest about AI, you know, and where you are right now in AI. 6:18Because here's the thing, Ne-Yo, 6:19I feel like if we do a follow up interview, like in a year or two, 6:22a whole new song might be being sung, you may have, you may, you might. 6:26You might. 6:27I mean, you might be right, you might be wrong. 6:29Well, I'm thankful that we've had the authentic Ne-Yo on here today at 100%. 6:33It's been a real privilege to talk with you, man. 6:35But I also hear that you've got a new tour coming on up. 6:38So tell me a little bit about what we can look forward to with that. 6:40Yes, indeed. 6:41And it's really me, guys. It's no holograms. 6:43It's me out there singing, dancing, sweating, being a whole human, all right? 6:49Sharing emotions and passions with other human beings. 6:53That's what it is. That's what my tour is. 6:54We're in Australia right now. 6:56It's the champagne and roses tour. 6:58We go from Australia to Singapore to to Japan to China. 7:02We go home for a minute for, you know, for Christmas and the holidays. 7:05And then come to top of the year, Mary just announced it myself, Mary J. 7:09Blige. Mario, we're going out again. Domestic. 7:12We'll be in a city near you, and it'll be actually us. 7:15It'll be actually as. 7:16Well, to use one of your own words, it sounds as though the real 7:19Ne-Yo is irreplaceable. 7:23I like what you did there. 7:24I like what you did there. I dig that. 7:27I dig that. 7:27Alright, so Ne-Yo obviously has some 7:31legitimate concerns about how AI gets employed moving forward. 7:34So let's talk to someone who's actively using it with artists. 7:38Ed Ulbrich, Chief Content Officer at Metaphysic.ai. 7:42Ed, welcome. 7:43Hey, Albert, how are you? 7:45I'm really excited to talk to you today. 7:47Yeah. Me too. Glad to glad to be here with you. 7:49So let's start off 7:50by talking about your work as Chief Content Officer at Metaphysic.ai. 7:54I know that you recently made Eminem a young Slim Shady again at the VMAs. 7:59So did you do that just to help millennials like me not feel like 8:02we're turning 40? 8:04What I find fascinating is there's there are artists that are really leaning 8:07in early into AI and, you know, you couldn't predict, but but, 8:12you know, Marshall Mathers, and his team have been, seekers. 8:18I would say they have been early. They have been pioneering. 8:20They've been looking they've been, investigating. 8:24What I love about this is seeing artists, you know, and I'm 8:28I am blessed, we'll get to this, 8:29but it's such a cool thing right now to be able to sit with great artists. 8:33They see our technology through the lens of the creative problems 8:37they're trying to solve in ways we would have never imagined. 8:40And so it's just magic to see something. 8:42They'll see it differently and find an application for it. 8:45What I love about this particular project is it is using AI technology 8:50magic, really in support of story and narrative and something bigger, right? 8:55So it's not just a gimmick, it's it's sort of a through line 8:59and it's something he's using in the work. And I think it's just brilliant. 9:01And and I find what he's doing, it's very personal. 9:05And he's using this technology in a way to express himself very personally, 9:09which, was refreshing and surprising like that. 9:12So to me, it's just like, what an honor, right? 9:14To see people just harness this and just do amazing things. 9:17And it blew up, obviously. 9:18Yeah. 9:19I mean, as a viewer, as a fan, you see it and you get chills. 9:22So it is eliciting this very emotional reaction. 9:25Absolutely. I mean, like I couldn't have said it better. 9:28That is, the power of this is you stop looking at how it was made. 9:32It just is, right? 9:34And everything I've done for the 30 years prior, we're struggling to get past that, 9:38you know, and hide it. 9:39But, you know, these are very different tools we use now. 9:42But Ed, I do want to know how it's made though. 9:44So how does this technology even work like on a practical level, 9:48how do you build a generative 9:49AI program that can make someone come to life on stage? 9:53Yeah. 9:54Well, that's a that's a big question that we could 9:56probably do a multi-part session on, with some people far smarter than me. 10:00I would tell you, just in general, it's data science, right? 10:03This is a fundamental shift from everything I've ever known. 10:07And to be quite honest, two and a half years ago, two years ago, 10:11I was introduced to a TikTok of deepfake Tom Cruise. 10:16Right. So that was sort of like, wow. 10:19And it was a friend. 10:20And I'm coming from your high end visual effects, you know, from from doing, 10:23you know, big, big, you know, Marvel movies and, and all that stuff. 10:27And so we saw that was like, wait, what's that, right? 10:31Now, at the same time, we'd 10:32also seen deepfakes that were kind of ehh, and it's all sketchy and stuff. 10:36But this just artistically being used 10:39in a way to entertain and make people laugh and smile, but it was so well done. 10:42So who's doing that? We were trying to figure it out. 10:45So that ends up turning into a visual effects supervisor friend of mine 10:49who does huge movies. 10:50A guy named Kevin Bailey, 10:52and he was working with Robert Zemeckis. 10:53He's Robert Zemeckis’s visual effects supervisor for movie 10:56after movie after movie. 10:57He saw the potential taken from a TikTok 11:00all the way to how you could deploy this on a major motion picture. 11:04It's Here, H-E-R-E, Robert Zemeckis. 11:06It's Tom Hanks and Robin Wright. 11:08It's a beautiful, amazing, film 11:12that, you know, otherwise likely couldn't have been made. 11:16That's the one where it looks as though the entire movie 11:19is shot from the exact same angle through time? 11:22It is. 11:22Nothing moves, but time, and time is moving constantly around this. 11:26And and it settles into this, this family. 11:29And it's just beautiful. And, 11:32it is 11:32such an extraordinary thing because this is a technology wonder. 11:36I mean, a technological wonder, it is, an unbelievable undertaking. 11:40And and yet it worked so well. 11:42It was, really a game changer for me. 11:45And so when I saw that, that from that TikTok to to getting to actually, 11:50because I didn't work at Metaphysic at that time, right Metaphysic, 11:53it just started, they'd done a screen test to, 11:57get this project when I saw it, it was it was extraordinary. 12:02I was both mind blown, like, oh, my God, that is amazing. 12:06And at the same time, just like, oh my God, like that. 12:09This is a profound quantum leap for me. 12:12It was like 12:13I could take everything I've ever known with the best people in the world 12:16using those tools and deploy them against this, and we could never do that. 12:20And then I found out it's rendered and done in real time. 12:24As the actor’s performing, the AI I'm not, that's being driven in real time live. 12:30And that was like, oh my God. 12:33And immediately 12:33I realized, like, over here I have horses and buggies and rocks and sticks, 12:37and here these people have thermonuclear fusion and they're focusing it, 12:41and they haven't even scratched the surface yet. 12:43And so that's so I have, I'm all in. 12:46Ed, you mentioned the term deepfake though. 12:49And I know that that can be a very controversial term. 12:53So where do you sit on that. 12:55And how do you consider the work that you do as related to deepfake? 12:58I hate that term. 12:59I do, but I hate it for, it's words, it’s letters. 13:03It's I think it comes from a bad place, right. 13:07That, that that word that, that made up thing, 13:10I think, and therefore it has a bad connotation in the culture. 13:13That's not the tool. 13:15That's the the people. Right. 13:17Be real clear about that. 13:19That same tool or tools like it or, 13:22or methodologies utilizing data science in certain ways. 13:26There are people doing extraordinary things like emotional, 13:29moving humanity things using this technology. 13:32So it's language. 13:34I think it's a moment in this continuum of all things I can say in a few years 13:37from now that what is will be we won't be talking about this anymore. 13:40There'll be all kinds of brand new stuff to be dealt with. 13:43Right? 13:44I mean, because as empowering as this technology is, 13:46we can both acknowledge that it doesn't come without pitfalls. 13:50Absolutely. 13:50Because, you know, there are artists who are worried 13:52that they'll be impersonated by or replaced by AI. 13:56So what are you doing in your work so that artists are building with AI? 14:01Yeah. Oh, that's a big question. 14:03It's a very important question. 14:05We're like in the wild, wild west, right? 14:08There's really no law and order yet. 14:10It hasn't all been figured out. And so, you know. 14:13Oh yes. 14:15You know, 14:16any technology in the wrong hands can be used for terrible things. 14:19People see, like I told you, artists look at what we do, and magic happens 14:23because they're seeing it through what they're trying to express and look 14:27and try to apply it. And and from that comes all this magic. 14:29But similarly, you know, other people can see things in a different way. 14:34It comes down to access, which requires money. 14:36There's still a barrier to entry. 14:38Not to say that it's not that much money. 14:40And some pretty extraordinary things can be done, 14:43I would say from our perspective, 14:44from my personal perspective also, and what I was drawn to 14:47to join this company to take on this movie. 14:49And now we've done three movies and we have all this amazing stuff is, 14:52one is we're here to we've devoted ourselves to 14:55we're helping save the world from boredom. Right. 14:57That's our mission. Right? 14:58So so that's our our purpose. 15:00This is very much, 15:02an entertainment endeavor currently. 15:05We are a technology company that makes tools that we are expressing, 15:10creatively in entertainment and doing so quite well. 15:14That is, that is a whole, whole lot of fun. 15:16At the same time, we're sort of in uncharted territory when we now 15:19get to identity and likeness and those types of things. 15:23Now, I will also tell you, because this old guy with the white hair 15:26and has been doing this a very long time. 15:27So we have been scanning famous actors and celebrities for 25 years. 15:32Right. 15:33We have been creating CG likenesses of them for, 15:36you know, that long as well, to varying degrees of success. 15:39So these are not new issues. 15:42And it's funny because weirdly, what was it, in 2009, 15:46I got to do a Ted talk after The Curious Case of Benjamin Button 15:50talking about all these same issues, all these. 15:53I got the questions at the end from from Chris Anderson. 15:55So tell us what are the ethical implications? 15:58And it was like this was what, 15 years ago. 16:00And that is what’s interesting is we're having the same conversation now. 16:04But there's a point on it and there's just a big, strike. 16:06You know, as you recall, you know, the entire industry was shut down. 16:10One of the foundational issues was AI. 16:13It was also the same for the writers. 16:15So it's a thing clearly, there's a lot of fear. 16:19We had to look at this in a way like we have to behave ethically. 16:22That's all you have to do is self-regulate 16:24because there are no, we're in this time... 16:27A guy I used to work with, at an ad agency a long time ago 16:31named Rashad Tobacoala and 16:33he has this great quote. 16:34The future does not fit in the containers of the past. 16:37Oh, hold on, let's say that again. 16:38The future does not fit in the containers of the past. 16:41I just I heard that it was like bullseye. 16:43That for where I am right now, where we are right 16:45now, that just says it all because we're applying 16:48our usual thinking to this new thing and it doesn't fit. 16:52This is brand new stuff. 16:53So intellectual property law, identity, property sovereignty, 16:56all these things like who owns what, how do I protect myself? 17:00Like, as it turns out, you don't own a copyright of yourself, 17:05right? You don't own yourself. 17:06At least your images of yourself. 17:08It's a complicated time. 17:09So behaving ethically is sort of at the core. 17:11And so I meet the founders of Metaphysic, and that's the first thing 17:15out of their mouth is ethics first. 17:16So, you know, that means you don't go scrape the internet, right? 17:22That that means that we have to be secure. 17:24We have to be confidential, you know, and there's there's a nice thing. 17:27In Hollywood, there are standards and rules already that are pretty significant. 17:31And for good reason. 17:32Half of filmmaking that you see in theaters today, 17:34you know, one half of it happens in like in a camera on a set. 17:37The other half is happening in computers all around the planet. 17:39So there are very strict security protocols, how things are done, 17:43you know, so that exists, there's layers beyond that. 17:46But we do believe, you know, people should own and control their data. 17:50Let's dig even deeper into that thing with ethics and regulations, 17:54because as you're saying, artists have a lot to gain with AI, 17:57but there is a need for that protection. 18:00You're building this content. 18:02So as someone who's doing that, 18:03how do you ensure the artists that they're safe to take the leap? 18:06That’s a, it's consent, right. Yeah. 18:09No consent, no AI. 18:11Right, that's it. 18:13We we build models, we train with 18:16training data, we do data acquisitions, and we we... 18:19And so all that needs to be if we're using existing materials, 18:23that has to be licensed and cleared, right. 18:25If you get no license, no clarity, no AI, that's just it. 18:27We just you just have to set a standard for yourself 18:31because currently they're not laws that are requiring us to do this. 18:34But there will be there should be, they are coming, we hope. 18:37They need to be 18:39because of the other people that are using similar technologies 18:41and having different ideas, and not here to help save the world from boredom 18:45and make you smile or think. 18:46But other agendas, right? 18:48So there needs to be laws. 18:50There need to be regulations. 18:51In the meantime, we behave accordingly. 18:53Look, I'm just thinking just off the top of my head, 18:55off of the projects that you mentioned, you've had to convince or your company, 18:59your team has had to convince, like Brad Pitt, Tom Hanks, Robin Wright, 19:03these A-list stars to feel comfortable enough to give themselves on over to AI. 19:09So just for fun, can you give me an elevator pitch in terms 19:12of how do you convince somebody like that that they are safe to dive in? 19:16There's a lot of education that that needs to happen. 19:19I will also tell you, you know, you mentioned Brad Pitt, but, 19:21you know, we just Brad Pitt back in 2008/9 when we were making Benjamin Button. 19:26And by the way, that wasn't the first time he'd been scanned and done this either. 19:29He's done this a lot. Right. 19:30So when we work with some of these, you know, Tom Hanks is not, 19:35new to the scanner, right? 19:37I think the issue now is the it's the technology. 19:41Right. Quite, quite honestly, 19:42it's it's not that we couldn't create capture likenesses and have data of them. 19:46It was just, you know, if you wanted to do anything, it was damn expensive, right? 19:49Because it took a lot of people, you know, in buildings around the world. 19:53But, you know, today, you know, it's very different. 19:56There's incredibly powerful technology. 19:58It's accessible and it's it's going so fast. 20:02And I would say in many cases it's education is what's missing, right? 20:06It's moving so fast that there is no way to educate fast enough. 20:10And if people aren't leaning in 20:11and trying and paying attention and kind of jumping into it, 20:15it just it's just sailing past them. 20:17And so, that's what I see. 20:19I have a lot of people, you know, you guys are, you know, eliminating jobs. 20:24You're it's a revolution. 20:25It's like, well, 20:27I don't I've never considered myself a revolutionist, you know, I've heard this. 20:30I'm old. Right? 20:3130 years ago, when we started Digital Domain in Venice, California, 20:35one of the co-founders, James Cameron, Scott Ross, Stan 20:38Winston, these are, you know, major people in visual effects and entertainment. 20:42And obviously James Cameron, 20:44my hero, 20:46you know, and and this company, 20:49launches and we are like, we are all digital. 20:51It was all CGI, right? 20:53Well, there was an outrage, right? 20:55People were like, you're going to put people, 20:57you know, motion control cameramen and model 20:59makers and miniatures and pyrotechnics, scenic painters and matte painters. 21:03You're going to put us all out of work and it was like, well, 21:05that wasn't the intent, but there's just new tools, right? 21:08You know, it’s kind of undeniable. 21:10And I remember coming into the studio one day, you know, 21:1328 years old, and there's picketers around us, 21:16and there wasn't even a labor union strike. 21:17It was just people like, 21:18you know, in the industry, it was like that was really like, wow, this is crazy. 21:23Like it's we're just do it. And to me, it's just CGI, right. 21:26Well, cut to, you know, here we are. 21:29That industry, you know, exploded massively after that, 21:33after the dawn of CGI in the late 90s, you saw the jobs grow by the thousands. 21:38There are now tens and tens and, you know, there are, 21:41we created tens of thousands of jobs coming out of that. 21:44Yeah. 21:44As a result of that shift in, in the, in the use of technology proliferated 21:49and we start to see morphing shifting to digital to the point 21:51where half of the movie is made in the computer now. 21:53I mean, that's just that's just where it's at. 21:55So still very, very, very, very expensive, very, very, very slow. 21:59You know, 22:00people don't realize that there's like a thousand people working on a movie. 22:02Let's talk about the potential that I'm thinking about, you know, young 22:06filmmakers out there, young artists or even as big name artists. 22:10Can you talk to us about how I can be used 22:12as a creativity amplifier rather than a shortcut? 22:16Amen. That's it. It’s an amplifier. 22:18It is that I say it's like it's jet fuel for creativity. 22:20I would say, you know, it's an exciting time. 22:23It really you look at like this it we've seen disruption, right? 22:26I saw the CGI disruption. 22:28And then within that we saw all these things happening as humans and, 22:31and game engines. 22:32And so, you know, it's exploded. 22:34And then I see this test for this movie and it was like, 22:39you know, stops you dead in your tracks for this movie Here. 22:42Right. 22:42It's just like, oh, everything changes with that. 22:45That moment was just like, 22:48you know, you can't go back and then you start to go forward 22:50and you realize, like, I'm just now learning. 22:52So many people are doing so many exciting things. 22:54Right? 22:55And so I think it's it's like lean in. 22:59I tell a lot of people, like, 23:00you know what do you recommend to visual effects artists today? 23:03It's like, look up, everyone's very busy looking down. 23:05Just look up because few people know what we're doing even. 23:08It's like there's so much stuff going on, like get into it. 23:11The other thing is it's a transfer of skill, right? 23:14And what I'm seeing, and this is so wonderful, 23:17it's like people who make visual effects in large visual effects 23:20that what they bring is not necessarily I know how to use this software 23:23or that software. That's really not what's important. 23:26It's the eye, it's the attention to detail. 23:30It's the ability to articulate in language, 23:32visual things explicitly right to someone else, to code 23:36something in a way that explicitly results 23:38in something that is, you know, very precisely, controlled. 23:41Right. That's that's what it's about. 23:43So those people who are facial animators 23:46and modelers and compositors, doing traditional visual, 23:50they're taking to AI generative AI like a duck to water. 23:54It is just it's wonderful to see because the ones who just are 23:58that's really like, if you're a seeker, if you're passionate 24:01and you see this stuff, it's like, 24:03oh my God, this just unlocks so much more that I can do. 24:06You know, I've seen people that enjoy what they're doing now. 24:10I am at a place like I'm having fun again. 24:12I have not said that for a very long time, by the way, 24:14but it really is extraordinary to see this. 24:16And so, look, are things changing? Yes. 24:20You know, will job skills change? Yes. 24:24You know, will certain functions and tasks go away? Yes. 24:28Will new things emerge? Absolutely. 24:31And they're happening every day. 24:32We are not even scratching the surface of what this stuff can do, right? 24:36Creatively. And and that's also what's exciting about it. 24:38And other people are making incredibly exciting tools as well. 24:42And when you start to see creatives now rise up and start to be able to work 24:45across a panel of just powerful things, 24:48we are going to start to 24:49see some things in the world pretty soon that are going to be extraordinary. 24:52You you mentioned scratching the surface. 24:54We've only begun to scratch it. 24:55But then where should we draw the line? 24:58You know, when using generative AI to create digital versions of people, 25:02whether they're real or fictional, how do we create the parameters? 25:06Well, that's a tough thing to talk to an artist about. 25:09I don't know, I always try to just go out of the lines, right? 25:13I don't I don't know that the I think the, the lines are, law and order. 25:19I think there is, you know, public decency. 25:22There is kind of kind of some moral, 25:25ethical obligation to not poisoning people's minds. 25:28That's, you know, we're seeing increasingly difficult. 25:31I don't know that there, I would look at that in this sort in that way. 25:35I, I look at this is, 25:37you know, at a certain point, you know, change is the only constant. 25:40It's inevitable. 25:41We are going through it constantly, it’s just happening a lot faster right now. 25:44I don't ever think about drawing lines and like, clinging to the past like, 25:47Oh, no, I'm staying here. 25:49It's like, no, I'm jumping in like, so. 25:51So this is going to go to another place I think we're going to go to. 25:53Formats are going to change for sure. 25:55Distribution channels absolutely will change 25:57because they already change anyway constantly. 25:59So that's that's just ever changing distribution. 26:02New business models are emerging all over the place. 26:05I think the supply chain that creates content in the world right now, right now, 26:10classic Hollywood, great content, Madison Avenue advertising, great quality 26:14content is going to go through a renaissance. 26:18But it is going to be very disruptive. 26:22Because it's on, game on right now. 26:24And I think you're going to start to see creativity surge. 26:28I'm seeing it already. Well with that creativity surging. 26:30I know the huge creative potential is one thing, 26:34but what are the more sinister implications of this, Ed? 26:38You know, again, person dating a major celebrity is over here. 26:41You know, the deepfake that we talked about before, that's one thing. 26:44But thinking about security, government, global business, 26:47that's where this can really get scary. What are your thoughts on that? 26:50Well, I'm not an expert on this. 26:52And I, for my own mental health, try not to, you know doom spiral? 26:57Very often. 26:57Sometimes it is very difficult. 26:59I'm clearly aware of the power of media and its impact. 27:04I also have, you know, I have, teenagers, 27:07you know, I'm, you know, the living focus group for some of this. 27:10I do think ethical and moral guardrails are important. 27:14There's horrible things, right. 27:16And it isn't necessarily just for the kind of AI is like science. 27:19I mean, it's just it's just a vast spectrum of different things. 27:23We're one slice of that. 27:25But but similar things in that slice, you know, 27:27you can take any of these tools and, and, you know, have medical breakthroughs. 27:32You know, we've seen we've seen that, science breakthrough, 27:35research breakthrough. 27:36Yeah. 27:36Just but at the same time, you know, there's, there's that other of that 27:40other world and, and that's the super evil version of thing. 27:44But okay, now we get guardrails. 27:45Guardrails are absolutely necessary, very important here. 27:48But let's bring it back to the good, which is the space where you really seem 27:52to thrive. 27:53You're coming at this from a very virtuous space, Ed. 27:55So as you're saying, 27:57what are you most excited about for this technology going forward? 28:00What's AI realism going to be like five years from now? 28:03I'm all about directors, 28:05directors, production designers, visual effects supervisors. 28:07You know that the people who make worlds and images and characters and people. 28:11So to me, that's super exciting and fun. That always has been. 28:14But putting these tools in those hands, 28:18that is just mind blowing and and I am, I, you know, super fortunate, 28:23very lucky guy to be able now to sit with, like, my heroes, 28:27like people that to me 28:28are some of the world's greatest filmmakers, like major people 28:32that are seeking this out, that are interested, that are 28:35and to just see what they're doing with it is just like, God, that's incredible. 28:39That's what is exciting. 28:40And seeing it change so fast and seeing someone grab it 28:43and use it this way, and someone else grab it and use it that way. 28:46And us helping enable that. 28:47And through that, innovation comes. 28:49So there is something incredibly intoxicating 28:51about that spirit of innovation. 28:52That's where we're at is it just unlocks the creative, you know, self blockers. 28:57Right. And and it's fun. It's fun. 29:00What a fantastic conversation this was. 29:03We were just so thrilled to have you. 29:06So I also want to give you this chance to talk about anything else 29:09that you want the people who are listening to go check out. 29:11What are you working on? Well, go see Here. 29:14An amazing film, incredible story, moving, powerful, 29:19beautifully executed and proud to have been a part of it. 29:22And then, you know, the new stuff I can't tell you about. 29:24But stay tuned. Watch this space. 29:27You know, ramping, we’re in production right now on a colossal, epic undertaking. 29:32And, you know, this coming this fall. 29:34Watch this space as well, not just in the movie theaters. 29:37You know, with Marshall Mathers you know, we did the first live 29:41generative AI on live television on the VMAs. 29:44So that's in the world now. That's a thing. 29:47And so as we go forward, just keep your eye out. 29:50You're going to see some really fun stuff coming this fall. 29:54You know, in, film and television and, and advertising, 29:59you're going to see some, some fun, some very fun stuff. 30:04As we come into the big, media holiday season. 30:07Friends, that's it for today's episode of AI and action. 30:10And I know that you all learned a ton from that one, so please stay 30:13tuned here for more and we'll see you back here again very, very soon.