About AI.
Artificial Intelligence, is not a shortcut it is a force multiplier for vision.
Over the past years, I’ve integrated AI across most layers of production:
image,video and 3D generation, and now also code.
I approach AI as both an technician and a storyteller
asking deeper questions about scale, emotion, and trust.
At Snap, I had direct contribution to multiple real-time rendering innovations, including Gaussian splats, Spectacles and genrative AI demos
I look at innovation through a film director lens, aiming to build visuals with empathy and cinematic taste, designing to reach viewers,in a way that speaks, resonate and touch somthing deeper.
With AI we stay in constant research, evolving with tools and studying their limits
, finiding new ways to understand the new “uncanny valley” curve that applies to trust robotics, and perception.
Through all of this, the core idea is using AI for good.
Vibe coding as an artist has become a powerful part of my process.
I know I can’t do everything alone,
many times I still rely on the deep proficiency of engineers and technical team members. But vibe coding gives me a way to reduce friction, experiment faster, speed up production, and find quick solutions that previously might have required building a dedicated tool from scratch.
For me, this is where something new begins: coding with story, using code not only for function, but as a creative extension of visual thinking, emotion, and iteration. It opens a new horizon between artist, toolmaker, and storyteller.
When using AI for storytelling, you begin to ask different kinds of questions
and they all revolve aroud trust,
1.Can I make viewer forget a character is AI, and simply, feel?
Can viewer expirence suspension of disbelief with AI.
2.Can I override the memory of a bad story by introducing an altarnate emotional experience?
3.What happens when an audience feels something deeply,
and only later discovers it was made with AI?
4, What is authorship, learning curve and effort worth with AI.?
Voice cloning deep fake and AI ethics.
Voice cloning, deepfakes, and AI ethics raise some of the most importantquestions question in modern storytelling.
How far can we go in generating an actor’s character to tell a story?
Can we clone the voices of a famous person for the sake of a story?
What are the implications of these sensitive tools when creative power feels almost unlimited?
These are not only technical questions they are questions of consent, identity, authorship, and trust. AI can extend storytelling in powerful ways, but it also demands new ethical boundaries. The real challenge is not only how realistic the result can be, but how responsibly it is made, disclosed, and used.
To answer these questions, I took a deep dive into AI-driven creation and set out to recreate an emotionally and visually believable ending to a beloved TV series.
My goal was to test how far I could push narrative repair, visual quality, voice emotion, and audience trust and to build a fully immersive reimagining of the ending of Game of Thrones.
This project is not online, and can be presented in person.
