By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept

Your #1 guide to start a business and grow it the right way…

InSmartBudget

  • Home
  • Startups
  • Start A Business
    • Business Plans
    • Branding
    • Business Ideas
    • Business Models
    • Fundraising
  • Growing a Business
  • Funding
  • More
    • Tax Preparation
    • Leadership
    • Marketing
Subscribe
Aa
InSmartBudgetInSmartBudget
  • Startups
  • Start A Business
  • Growing a Business
  • Funding
  • Leadership
  • Marketing
  • Tax Preparation
Search
  • Home
  • Startups
  • Start A Business
    • Business Plans
    • Branding
    • Business Ideas
    • Business Models
    • Fundraising
  • Growing a Business
  • Funding
  • More
    • Tax Preparation
    • Leadership
    • Marketing
Made by ThemeRuby using the Foxiz theme Powered by WordPress
InSmartBudget > Startups > AI Isn’t Coming for Hollywood. It’s Already Arrived

AI Isn’t Coming for Hollywood. It’s Already Arrived

News Room By News Room August 21, 2025 4 Min Read
Share

Akkaraju and Parker wasted no time in taking over Stability, installing Akkaraju as CEO and Parker as chairman of the board. They never spoke to Mostaque, although the former CEO says he reached out to offer his support.

The pair set about trying to remake Stability AI for the moment. Not long after they took over, the competition got fiercer. That September, another startup, Runway, signed the AI industry’s first big deal with a movie studio. Runway would get access to Lionsgate’s proprietary catalog of movies as training data and develop tools for the studio. “The time it takes to go from idea to execution is just shrinking—like a lot,” says Cristóbal Valenzuela, CEO of Runway. “You can do things in just a couple of minutes that used to take two weeks.” In the coming years, he predicts, “you will have teams of two, three, four people making the work that used to require armies and hundreds of millions of dollars.”

The deal with Lionsgate pushed the AI-fication of Hollywood into overdrive. “I can tell you, last year when I came to Los Angeles versus today, it’s night and day,” says Amit Jain, CEO of Luma, another Stability competitor. “Last year it was ‘Let’s prototype, let’s proof-of-concept’—they were deferring the inevitable. This year it’s a whole different tone.”

Moonvalley, an AI company founded by former Google DeepMind researchers (and the parent company of Asteria, an AI film studio cofounded by the actor Natasha Lyonne), recently told Time magazine that more than a dozen major Hollywood studios are testing its latest model—signaling openness to the technology, if not yet a full embrace.

“It was really about me and Sean coming in and providing that direction, that leadership, and really taking advantage of what we call the three T’s: timing, team, and technology,” Akkaraju says.

I’m sitting not at his TED Talk but in his $20 million mansion near Beverly Hills, on an immaculate overstuffed white couch overlooking a manicured garden. Akkaraju is fit, with a gleaming white smile and a button-up that shows off his biceps. His eye contact and handshake are equally strong.

Early on in his tenure, Akkaraju says, he decided that Stability would no longer compete with OpenAI and Google on building frontier models. Instead, it would create apps that sat on top of those models, freeing the company from enormous computing costs. Akkaraju negotiated a new deal with Stability AI’s cloud computing vendors, wiping away the company’s massive debt. Asked for specifics on how this came about, Akkaraju, through a spokesperson, demurred. Investors, like Coatue, came flocking back.

Where Mostaque painted a picture of AI solving the world’s most difficult problems, what Akkaraju is building, in brutally unsexy terms, is a software-as-a-service company for Hollywood. The goal is not to generate films, he says, but to use AI to augment the tools that filmmakers already use. “I really do think that our differentiation is having the creator in the center,” Akkaraju says. “I don’t see any other AI company that has James Cameron on its board.”

Read the full article here

News Room August 21, 2025 August 21, 2025
Share This Article
Facebook Twitter Copy Link Print
Previous Article People Who Started $1M+ Businesses All Share the Same Regret
Next Article The Overlooked Leadership Trait That’s Driving Big Results
Leave a comment Leave a comment

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Wake up with our popular morning roundup of the day's top startup and business stories

Stay Updated

Get the latest headlines, discounts for the military community, and guides to maximizing your benefits
Subscribe

Top Picks

You Might Be Violating Federal Labor Laws — Use These 6 Tools to Find Out Before It’s Too Late
August 21, 2025
The Overlooked Leadership Trait That’s Driving Big Results
August 21, 2025
People Who Started $1M+ Businesses All Share the Same Regret
August 21, 2025
How brands rushed to get in on Taylor Swift’s album announcement
August 21, 2025
Why AI-Driven Marketing Is No Longer Optional
August 20, 2025

You Might Also Like

Ford’s Answer to China: A Completely New Way of Making Cars

Startups

A Hiker Was Missing for Nearly a Year. Then an AI System Spotted His Helmet

Startups

Donald Trump Orders Crackdown on Politically Motivated ‘Debanking’

Startups

Trump Is Undermining Trust in Official Economic Statistics. China Shows Where That Path Can Lead

Startups

© 2023 InSmartBudget. All Rights Reserved.

Helpful Links

  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use
  • Press Release
  • Advertise
  • Contact

Resources

  • Start A Business
  • Funding
  • Growing a Business
  • Leadership
  • Marketing

Popuplar

The Congressional Creators Caucus is taking on Washington this fall
Take These 5 Steps to Future-Proof Your Business
How to Know What Your Boss Really Thinks About You

We provide daily business and startup news, benefits information, and how to grow your small business, follow us now to get the news that matters to you.

Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Lost your password?