Multiple A-list names across music and film are publicly accepting AI's inevitability -- a notable shift from the moral opposition that dominated the 2023 strikes era. Where the conversation two years ago centered on existential resistance, the tone from high-profile talent is moving toward pragmatic acceptance: AI is coming, so own your position before it arrives.

Ice-T told fans to accept AI-generated music videos as the new reality. Responding to a fan who argued AI shouldn't touch the music industry, the rapper and actor laid out a blunt economic case: "Fans want us to make and produce the music. Then shoot an expensive Video.. Then they get it for Free if they have an Apple subscription. Or Spotify pay us .007 cents a stream. The days of the expensive Videos are over. There isn't even MTV. Ai is the only sensible way to add visuals to a song. You can hate it all you want. It's the Future."

That same pragmatism showed up in a CNN/Variety interview, where Matthew McConaughey and Timothée Chalamet addressed AI in acting.

  • McConaughey predicted AI Oscar categories within five years. "Will we, in five years, have Best AI Film? Best AI Actor? Maybe. I think it could become another category. I'm not sure. It's going to be in front of us in ways we don't even see. It's gonna get so good we're not gonna know the difference."

  • He framed AI as a question of reality itself. "That's one of the big questions right now: the question of reality. It's more hazy than ever — in a very exciting way ... but also a scary way. Prep for it. Own your own lane, so you at least have agency when it starts to trespass."

  • Chalamet acknowledged the inevitability but stressed protection. "I'm fiercely protective of actors and artists in this industry. And equally, whatever tide is coming, it's coming." He called on Gen Z to lead AI integration while those in positions of power keep doors open for human talent.

The takeaway: The conversation has shifted from "should we?" to "how do we protect ourselves when it happens?" McConaughey's advice is concrete: own your own lane, maintain agency. Whether that's enough remains an open question.

Reply

Avatar

or to participate

Keep Reading