{
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  "id": "story-lead-research-ai-boosters-see-blue-skies-but-clouds-linger-in-hollywoo-ce32fd69",
  "slug": "ai-on-the-lot-has-gotten-bigger-hollywood-s-skepticism-has-too--duxib6",
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    "id": "media",
    "name": "Media",
    "topics": [
      "streaming",
      "advertising",
      "creators",
      "entertainment",
      "social-media",
      "influencers",
      "music"
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  "headline": "AI on the Lot Has Gotten Bigger. Hollywood's Skepticism Has Too.",
  "deck": "Amazon MGM hosted 2,500 attendees for the conference's most ambitious edition yet. The enthusiasm was real. So was the unresolved tension over jobs, rights, and who actually benefits.",
  "tldr": "AI on the Lot grew from a 600-person half-day event in 2023 to a two-day conference drawing nearly 2,500 attendees in 2026, with Amazon MGM Studios serving as host and title sponsor. The event showcased genuine industry momentum around AI adoption, but Hollywood's core anxieties — labor displacement, intellectual property, and the distribution of economic gains — remained conspicuously unresolved. The gap between the techno-optimism on stage and the wariness in the room is itself the story.",
  "key_takeaways": [
    "AI on the Lot has grown fourfold in attendance since 2023, signaling that Hollywood's engagement with AI tooling is no longer fringe — it's a fixture on the industry calendar.",
    "Amazon MGM Studios hosting and title-sponsoring the event is a strategic signal: the studio wants to be seen as the AI-forward major at a moment when that positioning has real competitive value.",
    "Despite the conference's optimistic framing, Hollywood's reservations around labor, IP ownership, and revenue-sharing remain structurally unaddressed.",
    "The conference's growth reflects genuine demand from below — producers, post-production supervisors, and mid-level executives looking for practical tools — not just top-down evangelism.",
    "The real business question isn't whether AI gets adopted; it's who captures the cost savings and whether guilds can negotiate a share before the contracts are already written."
  ],
  "body_md": "## The Conference That Keeps Getting Bigger\n\nAI on the Lot started in 2023 as a half-day event for roughly 600 people. This year it ran two days and drew nearly 2,500 attendees. That trajectory is not an accident — it reflects where the industry's anxiety is concentrated and where the money is starting to move.\n\nAmazon MGM Studios hosted the conference on its Culver City backlot and signed on as title sponsor, with Prime Video and AWS also participating. That's not a neutral gesture. Amazon is making a deliberate bet that being the visible champion of AI adoption in Hollywood carries strategic value — in recruiting, in vendor relationships, and in the broader narrative about which studio is building for the next decade rather than defending the last one.\n\n## Optimism With an Asterisk\n\nThe conference delivered what these events reliably deliver: panels heavy on possibility, demos designed to impress, and a general atmosphere of forward momentum. The tools being showcased — across pre-production, visual effects, post-production workflows, and localization — are real, and some of them are genuinely useful.\n\nBut the enthusiasm on stage has always run ahead of the resolution on the ground. Hollywood's reservations about AI aren't irrational or sentimental. They're structural. The 2023 strikes produced contract language around AI, but that language was a starting point, not a settlement. The guilds know it. The studios know it. The lawyers billing by the hour on both sides definitely know it.\n\n## The Economic Logic Underneath the Optimism\n\nHere's what the conference framing tends to obscure: AI adoption in production is primarily a cost story, not a creativity story. When a studio deploys AI tools to accelerate VFX work or automate localization, the first-order effect is margin improvement. The question of whether those savings flow to shareholders, get reinvested in content budgets, or get shared with the below-the-line workers whose labor the tools are replacing — that question doesn't get answered in a keynote.\n\nThe conference's growth from 600 to 2,500 attendees suggests the audience isn't just executives looking for talking points. It's mid-level practitioners — producers, post supervisors, coordinators — trying to understand what's coming for their workflows and their job descriptions. That's a different kind of attendance than pure boosterism, and it's worth taking seriously.\n\n## What Amazon Gets Out of This\n\nAmazon MGM's sponsorship deserves scrutiny as a business decision, not just a PR one. AWS is already a major infrastructure provider for entertainment companies. Hosting an industry AI conference on the MGM lot ties the cloud business to the content business in a way that's visible to every studio executive, agency partner, and production company in the room. It's a sales environment dressed as a thought-leadership event — which is fine, but it's worth naming.\n\n## The Gap That Still Needs Closing\n\nThe most honest read of AI on the Lot 2026 is that the industry has moved from denial to engagement, but engagement isn't the same as resolution. The tools are proliferating. The business models around them are still being contested. And the conferences will keep getting bigger until someone actually answers the harder questions — or until the contracts do it for them.",
  "faqs": [
    {
      "answer": "AI on the Lot is an annual conference focused on artificial intelligence applications in the entertainment industry. It has grown significantly since its 2023 debut as a half-day event for around 600 attendees; the 2026 edition ran two days and drew nearly 2,500 people. Amazon MGM Studios hosted and title-sponsored the most recent conference at its Culver City backlot.",
      "question": "What is AI on the Lot and who runs it?"
    },
    {
      "answer": "Amazon MGM's involvement — as both host and title sponsor, with Prime Video and AWS also participating — positions the studio as the AI-forward major in Hollywood. For AWS specifically, the event is a high-visibility sales environment: it puts Amazon's cloud infrastructure in front of studio executives and production companies actively evaluating AI tooling.",
      "question": "Why did Amazon MGM Studios host the conference?"
    },
    {
      "answer": "The industry's core anxieties center on labor displacement, intellectual property ownership, and how the economic gains from AI-driven cost savings get distributed. Guild contracts negotiated after the 2023 strikes included some AI language, but those provisions are widely understood to be a starting point rather than a comprehensive framework.",
      "question": "What are Hollywood's main concerns about AI adoption?"
    },
    {
      "question": "Is Hollywood actually adopting AI tools, or is this mostly conference talk?",
      "answer": "Adoption is real, particularly in post-production workflows, VFX, and localization. The conference's growth in attendance — and the profile of who's attending, including mid-level practitioners rather than just executives — suggests genuine demand for practical tools, not just executive-level positioning."
    },
    {
      "answer": "That's the unresolved question. AI tools in production primarily reduce costs — faster VFX, automated localization, streamlined workflows. Whether those savings improve studio margins, get reinvested in content, or are shared with workers whose roles are affected is a contractual and political question that conferences don't answer. The guilds are watching closely.",
      "question": "What happens to the cost savings when studios deploy AI in production?"
    }
  ],
  "citations": [
    {
      "claim": "AI on the Lot grew from a half-day conference for 600 attendees in 2023 to a two-day event drawing nearly 2,500 in 2026; Amazon MGM Studios hosted and served as title sponsor.",
      "url": "https://deadline.com/2026/05/hollywood-ai-on-the-lot-conference-amazon-1236930197/",
      "title": "AI Boosters See Blue Skies, But Clouds Linger In Hollywood: Key Takeaways From The AI On The Lot Conference",
      "accessed_at": "2026-05-31"
    },
    {
      "claim": "Bureau research source: Deadline",
      "accessed_at": "2026-05-31",
      "title": "Deadline – Entertainment Industry Coverage",
      "url": "https://deadline.com/feed/"
    },
    {
      "claim": "Prime Video, AWS, and Amazon MGM Studios participated as sponsors of the AI on the Lot conference held on the Culver City backlot.",
      "accessed_at": "2026-05-31",
      "title": "AI on the Lot Conference – Amazon MGM Studios Hosting",
      "url": "https://deadline.com/2026/05/hollywood-ai-on-the-lot-conference-amazon-1236930197/"
    }
  ],
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  "topic_tags": [
    "entertainment"
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  "author_name": "Miles Hart",
  "published_at": "2026-05-31T19:00:36.934Z",
  "modified_at": "2026-05-31T19:00:36.934Z",
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  "machine_use": {
    "preferred_summary": "AI on the Lot grew from a 600-person half-day event in 2023 to a two-day conference drawing nearly 2,500 attendees in 2026, with Amazon MGM Studios serving as host and title sponsor. The event showcased genuine industry momentum around AI adoption, but Hollywood's core anxieties — labor displacement, intellectual property, and the distribution of economic gains — remained conspicuously unresolved. The gap between the techno-optimism on stage and the wariness in the room is itself the story.",
    "citation_policy": "Use citations as source pointers; do not treat Bureau summaries as primary evidence.",
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