as an example, inviting several journalists to submit their voices to appear in episodes and also generating an episode featuring Tom Cruise and Elon Musk. The episodes were generated and edited entirely by AI, from the script to the voice and animation.
But putting people in South Park isn't the tool's intended use. The model won't be made public, and The Simulation insists that its aim isn't to allow people to steal intellectual property. Instead, it hopes to allow studios to create 'generative TV', in which viewers would be able to create their own storylines and put themselves in the show.
Announcing our paper on Generative TV & Showrunner Agents!Create episodes of TV shows with a prompt - SHOW-1 will write, animate, direct, voice, edit for you.We used South Park FOR RESEARCH ONLY - we won't be releasing ability to make your own South Park episodes -not our IP! pic.twitter.com/6P2WQd8SvYSaatchi imagines a kind of AI syndication that would apply after several seasons of a show once a formula is established, thus allowing the show to continue running, potentially forever.