'Shazam!' star Zachary Levi compares AI to biblical tragedy
“Shazam!” star Zachary Levi senses a biblical disaster coming, thanks to artificial intelligence.
On the “George Janko Show” podcast, Levi compared AI to the great flood from the book of Genesis, saying, “I don't think the flood is water. Honestly, I think the flood is AI.”
He continued, “We can talk all day and think philosophically about how to save the industry itself from the way it treats people, or it doesn't make good content or whatever. Guys, honestly love, t-minus two years from now, I wish you luck in getting any job, because the studios will be and technology…
Levi went on to give an example of audiences being able to make their own movies thanks to AI technology.
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“Imagine if you were to, not only would all the studios have this technology, but then they would come to you and say, 'Hey as part of your HBO Max subscription you can pay an extra ten dollars, and use the creator's sandbox, and there, you can make your own movies too you can type in anything that's a Warner Brothers legacy, so it could be Shazam and Batman and Neo from 'The Matrix,' and you can type in all these characters, and you want them to go looking for riches on Mars and I want it to sound like a Stephen Spielberg movie, go.' And then it's going to make that movie, and it's going to look unrecognizable from the humanization, it's going to look absolutely amazing, but it's going to look like real life. That's where we're going to be.”
The star of “Tangled” revealed that he is working in his studio to continue the curve, he said, “Right now, the studio that I am trying to build is very similar to the ark that God told Noah, 'You have to go and build this thing, because the flood is coming.
When asked by host George Janko why he wants to continue working in entertainment if AI poses such a threat, Levi focused on the power of the human factor.
“There should always be, I hope there always will be, a niche, at least a niche part of the entertainment industry where people are like, 'I still want to go and support people who make art. It's human art.'
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He acknowledged that it will be a tough sell as AI advances.
“Like no matter how good AI-derived art becomes, it's going to be very, very, very, very good, and it's going to be cheap. A lot of people think, 'Yeah, but I'm never going to want a computer-generated movie.' If we are very naive people, obviously, but if a movie made by a person still costs you twenty bucks, but for two bucks you can make a movie where you, in the way you can scan your face and your voice the next few for two bucks and watch yourself as Superman in the movie, you'll totally pay for that movie.
“I don't think the flood is water. Honestly, I think the flood is AI.”
The “Chuck” star also revealed that he is facing new competition from former actors who may have their families signed to their likeness. He described a hypothetical situation in which Gene Kelly's descendants could sell the rights to the star's likeness. “And all of a sudden we're going to watch Gene Kelly movies again. How crazy! And again, I don't want to support that, but you're cheating on me?! … Like the new 'Singing in the Rain' sequel, I want to watch that, take my money!”
Levi's example is not far away, as there have already been attempts to make a movie with James Dean resurrected by AI, although nothing has been completed and released so far.
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Entertainment, of course, is not the only industry that will see the impact of AI, and Levi urged people to remain vigilant.
“I don't want to be a doomsday person, but I can't stress this enough, please … wake up to AI. Please wake up to it. It's not, 'Oh that's cool,' or a passing fad or anything. It's going to replace a lot of jobs, and it's going to happen faster than you think.” that it will happen,” he said.
“There should always be, I hope there always will be, a niche, at least a niche part of the entertainment industry where people are like, 'I still want to go and support people who are making art.'”
The 44-year-old woman continued, saying, “In the grand scheme of things, in terms of technology and progress, I'm a firm believer that you can't stop it, you can only hope to direct it. We can't stop this flood, we can only build levees and dams and channels and things to try to make sure that we're guiding you in the best way there will still be casualties and a lot of casualties in the process, unfortunately, but I think ultimately, we're entering what will be a new world, officially.
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“Finally, and this is part of the reason why I want to build, why I feel that I need to build a campus, or more campuses if I can do more, is because I think that really, as people, what we want. just to focus on it, there are two areas of vocation that mean anything, that go over time future, and that is creation and acquisition.”
The one who adds AI will still be a tool used in creation and discovery, but those two things are what “moves the human heart, mind, and soul, and I think as long as we stick to many places for people to work, because work is not just about making a lot of money, it's always a lot , and now they sit too much, and now they have no purpose, and they die.”
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“I think it's important, we have to be objective as we enter this new world, but I don't know. I don't know what it's going to be like for everybody in all the other industries. And I don't know. What's going to happen for sure in entertainment I can guess, and my guess is, in a very short way people , not just studios but everyday people with various studio catalogs, will be able to access, in a way, not just their own movies but TV shows, video games.”
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