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Picture nothing, forever, Seinfeld-like AI-generated TV running 24/7 on Twitch.

What’s the deal with AI technology?
Screenshot: Mismatch Media / Kotaku

There’s always something to watch on Twitch, that’s for sure Your favorite musicians talk about video games Or Your favorite streamers are discussing politics.. Now your choices are absurd, often meaningless. Seinfeld-like show that works 24/7/365 and is created on the fly using artificial intelligence. Welcome to the future of TV, perhaps?

So-called AI has been a hot topic lately. The technology, which traditionally uses machine learning to generate text, images and video from pre-existing data sets, is suddenly everywhere: art, article and essay writing; Even video games. You can’t escape the conversation these days, especially if you spend any time online or reading the news. It seems we have reached that point in the sci-fi movies of the 80s and 90s when AI took over the world. Perhaps this feels especially true on a suddenly hot Twitch channel; I will wait for you foreverThe Endless TV show uses AI to create every element.

Watchmeforever, launched 24/7 by media lab Mismatch Media. Seinfeld-like, sitcom-like Nothing, forever. Using machine-learning technologies like DALL-E, OpenAI GPT-3, Stable Diffusion, and more, the video makes a terrible Xerox of Larry David’s 90s sitcom. An Elaine (dubbed “Yvonne Torres”), George (Fred Castopolous), Kramer (Zoltan Kackler) and, of course, Jerry (Larry Feinberg), all live in a New York-esque metropolis.

But despite the obvious similarity of the show Seinfeld, it doesn’t hold the charm or the humor. In fact, it’s not only boring, it’s weird and unpredictable. It looks like a rejected PS1 voxel game, the characters wobble when they move, the camera angles are awkwardly placed with some of the weirdest zooms I’ve ever seen, and the text is very flat. It makes sense considering that the whole thing is done using artificial intelligence.

Nothing, a forever picture of Larry doing his best stand-up comedy routine.

Something, some kind of airline food.
Screenshot: Mismatch Media / Kotaku

There’s even a stand-up comedy section, like inside. SeinfeldLaughter tracks that try to reinforce predictable punch lines. At one point during the show, Larry asked the crowd why something like this could happen and made this joke about feeding animals jokes. “Because they taste funny,” Larry said. It was quiet for a long time – normal Nothing, forever-Before the laugh track enters briefly, it’s also only cut off by the awkward transition music. And since this is an endless, AI-generated show, none of those jokes can be replayed.

But that’s why I, and as of this writing about 3,000 people, can’t stop watching Mismatch Media’s. Nothing, forever. It’s weird, sure, but it’s also charming in its unsettling production. Everything in the show is solid and artificial. The sound “works” is especially rough around the edges. still, Nothing, forever Discount Jerry and my friends standing around the apartment talking about nothing in the middle of nowhere has this strange ability to grab my attention.

Read more: Rick and Morty The creator used the controversial AI art, voice action in the new shooter

The idea that technology can continuously generate ’90s-style sitcoms is undeniably novel. That said, like other recent intersections of AI and media, this feels like a slippery slope with the potential to upend machine-generated content, entire jobs, creativity or otherwise.

In an email exchange with Kotaku, co-creator Skyler Hartl said he and co-creator Brian Haberberger have been working on the “passion project” part-time for the past four years with a team of three to seven people. With all the AI ​​tools at hand, including Azure Cognitive Services for voice generation, Hartl thinks the team will be able to “drive new shows or formats.”

Nothing, forever picture with Fred and Larry standing around a pretty generic looking apartment.

Nice to get there, Larry.
Screenshot: Mismatch Media / Kotaku

“The idea started as an art project—a generational show that people could explore and create ‘nothing’ forever,” says Hartl. “As creators, we thought it would be really fun. [and] Conceptually a new area to explore, but very early on, we began to realize that we had the potential to create a platform beyond the show to help create this type of generative media. There was no ChatGPT/GPT-3/Stable Diffusion when we started, but with recent developments, these types of shows are looking more and more likely to be the way forward.

Taking inspiration from David Lynch’s 2002 short horror anthology RabbitsHartl said the team saw the ’90s sitcom as “the perfect medium for the target” and wanted to “create something that would last forever.” But they don’t have any negative impact on TV production.

“Our goal with this project and platform is to enable more creators, not fewer,” Hartl said. “We want people with limited resources to realize their creative vision, and we think this kind of technology will be the backbone for that.”

Although he enjoys corruption. Nothing, foreverI am wary that artificial intelligence technologies can have a negative impact not only on art, but on the world in general. If used properly and carefully, AI can sometimes make life a little easier. However, since capitalists want to maximize production for as little money as possible, I worry that the writing is on the wall for at least some artists and other creators who make a living from their art. Nothing, forever It’s certainly neat, but you have to wonder where this sort of thing could eventually lead.

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