Future Frames examines the intersection of AI and media infrastructure and how that intersection is reshaping storytelling.

This is not a show about content. It is a show about control. Infrastructure. Data. Economics. The layers that determine what gets made, what gets seen, and who gets paid.

For most of media history, storytelling was governed by institutions. Studios, networks, publishers. Today it is increasingly governed by technical systems. Algorithms influence visibility. Metrics influence creative direction. Infrastructure shapes ownership, authorship, and revenue.

The system is no longer behind the story. It is embedded in it. Future Frames exists to make those systems visible.

I’ve spent decades inside media technology across streaming, production, archives, and live broadcast infrastructure. What is clear now is that the most important shifts are happening at the intersection of AI and infrastructure. In provenance frameworks. In rights metadata. In programmable workflows. In feedback loops that reshape creative and economic outcomes.

This show explores those shifts through conversations with the people building and governing the modern media stack in real time.

You’ll hear from technologists designing new production architectures. Founders building AI-native creative tools. Standards leaders thinking about interoperability and trust at scale. Operators who have to make these systems work under real constraints.

Storytelling is still human. But the systems shaping it are increasingly software-defined.

And that changes everything.

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Future Frames explores how artificial intelligence is reshaping media infrastructure. Conversations with founders, technologists, standards leaders, and operators building the next generation of production, distribution, and trust systems.

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