Generative Hollywood: E! founder Larry Namer on AI
AI is hitting entertainment like a sledgehammer ... from algorithmic gatekeepers and AI-written scripts to digital actors and entire movies generated from a prompt.In this episode of TechFirst, host John Koetsier sits down with Larry Namer, founder of E! Entertainment Television and chairman of the World Film Institute, to unpack what AI really means for Hollywood, creators, and the global media economy.Larry explains why AI is best understood as a productivity amplifier rather than a creativity killer, collapsing months of work into hours while freeing creators to focus on what only humans can do. He shares how AI is lowering barriers to entry, enabling underserved niches, and accelerating new formats like vertical drama, interactive storytelling, and global-first content.The conversation also dives into:• Why AI-generated actors still lack true human empathy• How studios and IP owners will be forced to license their content to AI companies• The future of deepfakes, guardrails, and regulation• Why market fragmentation isn’t a threat — it’s an opportunity• How China, Korea, and global platforms are shaping what comes next • Why writers and storytellers may be entering their best era yetLarry brings decades of perspective from every major media transition — cable, streaming, global expansion — and makes the case that AI is just the next tool in a long line of transformative technologies.If you care about the future of movies, television, creators, and culture, this is a conversation you don’t want to miss.⸻🎙 GuestLarry NamerFounder, E! Entertainment TelevisionChairman, World Film Institute⸻👉 Subscribe for more conversations on AI, media, and the future of technology:https://techfirst.substack.com⸻00:00 – AI, emotion, and the danger of “AI twins”00:00 – Welcome to Tech First + the AI disruption of entertainment00:01 – Chaos in Hollywood: Disney, Netflix, Warner Bros, and consolidation00:02 – AI as a productivity tool, not a creativity replacement00:03 – How AI gives creators back their most valuable asset: time00:04 – Regulation, guardrails, and the need for consequences00:05 – Fragmentation, niche content, and the future economics of media00:06 – Why streaming has been a gift to writers and storytellers00:06 – Disney licensing IP to AI and why it was inevitable00:07 – Contracts, actors’ rights, and why the law must catch up00:08 – Deepfakes, AI avatars, and digital celebrities00:09 – AI actors, empathy gaps, and spotting what isn’t human00:10 – Using GPT to launch a bestselling book in days00:11 – Big media M&A in an AI-driven world00:12 – Jobs AI will eliminate vs. jobs AI will create00:13 – Miniseries, deep storytelling, and why streaming changed everything00:14 – Vertical video, short-form drama, and old ideas in new formats00:15 – China vs. the West: who’s ahead in entertainment tech00:16 – Global storytelling and Game of Thrones–scale opportunities00:17 – Why Hollywood could ruin vertical video00:18 – Interactive, immersive, and branched storytelling00:19 – The future of screens, platforms, and audience choice00:20 – Why new media never replaces old media00:20 – Final thoughts on abundance, choice, and creativity