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AI Video Is Eating The World — Olivia and Justine Moore, a16z

Shownote

When the first video diffusion models started emerging, they were little more than just “moving pictures” - still frames extended a few seconds in either direction in time. There was a ton of excitement about OpenAI’s Sora on release through 2024, but so far only Sora-lite has been widely released. Meanwhile, other good videogen models like Genmo Mochi, Pika, MiniMax T2V, Tencent Hunyuan Video, and Kuaishou’s Kling have emerged, but the reigning king this year seems to be Google’s Veo 3, which for the first time has added native audio generation into their model capabilities, eliminating the need for a whole class of lipsynching tooling and SFX editing. The rise of Veo 3 unlocks a whole new category of AI Video creators that many of our audience may not have been exposed to, but is undeniably effective and important particularly in the “kids” and “brainrot” segments of the global consumer internet platforms like Tiktok, YouTube and Instagram. By far the best documentarians of these trends for laypeople are Olivia and Justine Moore, both partners at a16z, who not only collate the best examples from all over the web, but dabble in video creation themselves to put theory into practice. We’ve been thinking of dabbling in AI brainrot on a secondary channel for Latent Space, so we wanted to get the braindump from the Moore twins on how to make a Latent Space Brainrot channel. Jump on in!

Highlights

The rapid evolution of AI video generation is reshaping the creative landscape, enabling new forms of content that are redefining digital storytelling and virality. From experimental diffusion models to powerful tools like Veo 3, creators now have access to technology that not only produces moving images but also integrates audio—opening up entirely new possibilities for expression.
05:00
Consumer platforms drive AI video virality more than traditional forums.
17:30
AI allows anyone, not just conventionally attractive people, to become popular influencers.
18:36
Payouts from social platforms average around $20 per million views for viral AI videos.
34:43
Overlap automates clipping YouTube videos, predicts virality, and generates social posts with subtitles and smart zoom.
37:24
Well-known figures' clips have higher viral potential on social platforms
44:38
AI-generated furniture and home-design content goes viral on Facebook
47:47
The speaker hopes for a tool to generate merchandise based on latest videos

Chapters

Introductions & Guest Welcome
00:00
The Rise of Generative Media
00:49
AI Video Trends: Italian Brain Rot & Viral Characters
02:24
Following Trends & Creating AI Content
05:00
Hands-On with AI Video Creation
07:17
Monetization & Business of AI Content
18:36
Platforms, Models, and the Creator Stack
23:34
Native Content vs. Clipping & Going Viral
37:22
Prompt Theory & Meta-Trends in AI Creativity
41:52
Professional, Commercial, and Platform-Specific AI Video
47:42
Wrap-Up & Final Thoughts
48:57

Transcript

swyx: Hey, everyone. Welcome to the Latent Space Podcast. This is Alessio, partner and CTO at Decibel, and I'm joined by my co-host, swyx, founder of Small AI. Alessio: Hello, hello. We have a very special double guest episode with Justine and Olivia Moor...