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EVERYONE IS ALREADY USING AI (AND HIDING IT)
New York magazine
|June 2-15, 2025
WITH DOZENS OF NEW STUDIOS AND RAPIDLY EVOLVING TECH GENERATIVE VIDEO IS MORE EMBEDDED IN HOLLYWOOD THAN WE MAY REALIZE.
ONE RECENT EVENING on the Eastside of Los Angeles, a couple hundred people gathered in a cavernous old soundstage to celebrate the arrival of a new AI studio—one of the nearly 100 now operating in Hollywood. Called Asteria Film Co., it was founded by Bryn Mooser, a serial entrepreneur, and his girlfriend, the actress and writer Natasha Lyonne. Mooser, 45, is tall with a sculpted jaw and salt-and-pepper beard; he fits the role of a rumpled yet elegant pitchman so well that Cartier shot an advertorial of him titled “The Entrepreneur.” He led me through the studio: a 25,000-square-foot collection of soundstages and a workshop built in 1916 by the producer Mack Sennett, who pioneered new uses of scenic backdrops in early filmmaking. In the lobby, he paused at a glass-encased architectural model of the studio as it looked when it was first built. “There was no roof because they were just using sunlight,” he told me. “It was before electricity.” As Mooser saw it, Asteria fit into a lineage of creatives who had ushered in new eras of filmmaking. He reminded me that Walt Disney was a technologist. So was George Lucas. “The story of Hollywood is the story of technology,” he said.
This story is from the June 2-15, 2025 edition of New York magazine.
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