Showrunner is a new video content platform that will specialize in user-generated AI slop. The idea is people will pay to use generative AI tools to produce their own TV, starting with short animated sketches. Who asked for this? Amazon for starters, which is investing an undisclosed amount in the company behind Showrunner. But even the startupās CEO, Edward Saatchi, doesnāt sound entirely convinced by the pitch. āMaybe nobody wants this and it wonāt work,ā he told Variety
Billed as āNetflix for AI,ā Showrunner is the work of a small, dozen-person start-up called Fable cofounded by Saatchi, who previously specialized in VR entertainment for Oculus. The platform is in beta right now, with users experimenting on āmakingā episodes for two shows: a Family Guy-looking tech satire called Exit Valley, and a sci-fi romcom about a husband and wife who get transported to another world while fighting at IKEA.
Early users are currently on the companyās Discord serving up AI prompts like āAli G meets Joe Biden and Asks him if he wants to buy some feet pics from this super hot chic he knows.ā Others include Joe Rogan and Donald Trump arguing about the Epstein files. None of them are actually funny. Of all the ways you could spend time on the internet, watching cringe slop on Showrunner might currently be one of the worst. But that may not even be the point.
āThe āToy Story of AIā isnāt just going to be a cheap Toy Story,ā Saatchi told Variety. āOur idea is that āToy Story of AIā would be playable, with millions of new scenes, all owned by Disney.ā He seems to feel that the interactivity of rapidly sharing, refining, and iterating on prompts gives Showrunner a level of interactivity more reminiscent of video games than traditional TV or YouTube.
According to Fable, the goal is to charge users monthly fees to make the shows. Some of that money will in turn go to companies like Disney, who itās currently in talks with for licensing rights. There are also reportedly guardrails in place to keep the AI-generated shows somewhat narratively consistent and prevent copyright infringement.
Considering that all of the content already looks like itās ripping off Fox animated sitcoms, weāll see how that goes. Disney and other Hollywood studios are already suing one AI company for allegedly stealing their IP.