Technically Creative by KoobrikLabs

Orlando Wood

Technically Creative by KoobrikLabs explores how technology and AI are transforming the creative industries. In a world where creativity and technology increasingly intersect, artists, designers, and storytellers need to embrace new tools to streamline workflows, eliminate inefficiencies, and unlock their full potential. How can AI enhance the creative process without replacing the human touch? What emerging technologies are reshaping content production? How can creative teams stay ahead in a tech-driven landscape? These are the questions that our host, Orlando Wood, seeks to answer on this show. In each episode, we sit down with leaders from media, entertainment, publishing, advertising, and beyond to uncover how they’re leveraging technology to elevate creativity and solve industry-specific challenges. You can learn more about Koobrik Labs at KoobrikLabs - KoobrikLabs 045657

  1. Inside USC’s Entertainment Tech Lab: Erik Weaver on AI, Virtual Production, and the Future of Story

    1 TIME SIDEN

    Inside USC’s Entertainment Tech Lab: Erik Weaver on AI, Virtual Production, and the Future of Story

    In this episode of Technically Creative, Orlando sits down with Erik Weaver, Head of Virtual and Adaptive Production at the Entertainment Technology Center at USC, a studio-funded R&D group founded at the request of George Lucas. Erik explains how ETC bridges Hollywood and Silicon Valley, from drafting the first pass at digital cinema standards to today’s work on studio-grade AI pipelines. The goal is simple, make new tech practical, controllable, and copyrightable for professional storytellers. Erik shares how the team moved from on-set virtual production to AI-first workflows, why control, consistency, and quality matter more than novelty, and how their short The Bends used custom LoRAs, zero-trust cloud, and 32-bit EXR outputs to hit professional finishing standards. He breaks down provenance tracking for copyright, clean model tiers, and why performance will be the next frontier for AI in production. The conversation stays focused on story, culture, and the people on set, technology is a toolbox, not the point. Orlando and Erik explore What ETC at USC is, who funds it, and why it exists for the industryLessons from digital cinema, volumes, and the VAD that still matter in AI pipelinesAI as a professional toolbox, not a shortcut, control, consistency, qualityClean models, provenance, and the current path to copyright for AI worksBuilding secure, on-prem or cloud zero-trust environments for training private LoRAsThe Bends case study, custom blobfish assets, LoRA training at high VRAM, 32-bit EXR deliveryOSVP to AI first, where Blender, Nuke, ShotGrid, and gen tools meetCost, compute, and why practical workflows still need real artists in the loopWhy multimodal will win, and why performance capture and synthesis are the next edgeHow to keep cinema culturally relevant for a generation that wants interactivity

    48 min.
  2. The Future Is Untold: Darren O’Kelly on Creativity, Culture, and Cloud-Native Storytelling

    4 DAGE SIDEN

    The Future Is Untold: Darren O’Kelly on Creativity, Culture, and Cloud-Native Storytelling

    In this episode of Technically Creative, Orlando Wood sits down with Darren O’Kelly, CEO and co-founder of Untold Studios, to explore how one of the most forward-thinking creative companies in the world is reshaping the future of entertainment, VFX, and storytelling. After 15 years leading The Mill, Darren left to build something radically different—a studio built entirely in the cloud, powered by artistry, and born out of independence. From creature design in Mission Impossible and The Crown to developing music shows with Billie Eilish and Imagine Dragons, Untold has quickly become a creative force across film, television, advertising, and music. Darren shares the story behind Untold’s creation, how the fall of Technicolor reshaped the industry, and what it took to onboard 550 VFX shots from Alien Earth within 10 days—all thanks to their cloud-native infrastructure. He also dives into how Untold uses AI not as a replacement for creativity, but as a tool for precision control—from de-aging models to relighting live-action scenes without breaking cinematic integrity. But at its core, this episode is about something deeper: Why human connection, story, and emotion will always outlast any technology. Orlando and Darren explore: How Untold became the world’s first fully cloud-native studioWhat the fall of Technicolor revealed about legacy models in VFXThe role of adversity and adaptability in building new creative culturesWhy “precision control” is non-negotiable for high-end storytellingUntold’s approach to AI—solving real problems, not hype-driven onesThe power of blending music, production, and technology under one creative roof Why art and commerce aren’t enemies—and why culture is Untold’s secret weapon.

    54 min.
  3. Why Modern Athletes Must Be Creators: Lessons from Max Fleming and the Savannah Bananas

    23. SEP.

    Why Modern Athletes Must Be Creators: Lessons from Max Fleming and the Savannah Bananas

    If you’re a creative company looking to future-proof your business, book a free consultation call at https://koobriklabs.com/contact/ In this episode of Technically Creative, Orlando Wood speaks with Max Fleming, founder of Motive LA, who represents standout athletes and creators—exploring how NIL deals, TikTok, and entertainment-first sports are reshaping the trajectory of modern athletic careers. From repping the iconic Savannah Bananas players as they sell out Fenway Park to shaping the brand of creators like the Pointer Brothers, Max is at the crossroads of sports, entertainment, and the creator economy. His mantra (community, consistency, relatability) guides a new model of management built for athletes and creators who are as viral online as they are talented on the field. We dig into how Motive LA helps athletes fight burnout, build long-term careers, and turn fleeting viral moments into sustainable opportunities. Max explains why today’s athletes can’t afford to ignore social media, how NIL is changing the game for college stars, and why entertainment-first teams like the Savannah Bananas may hold the blueprint for the future of sports. Max also shares: How the Savannah Bananas reinvented baseball for the TikTok eraWhy NIL deals make social presence essential for college athletesThe strategy behind building “internet homies” like the Pointer BrothersHow to fight imposter syndrome and burnout in the creator economyWhy brand partnerships must serve the person, not just the algorithmThe difference between being a manager and being a teammateWhy community, consistency, and relatability are the keys to a 30-year career

    56 min.
  4. Hollywood’s AI Classroom: Verena Puhm on Dream Lab LA

    16. SEP.

    Hollywood’s AI Classroom: Verena Puhm on Dream Lab LA

    If you’re a creative company looking to future-proof your business, book a free consultation call at https://koobriklabs.com/contact/ In this episode of Technically Creative, Orlando Wood sits down with Verena Puhm — Head of Studio at Dream Lab LA, the R&D arm of Luma AI, and a writer-producer-director turned AI pioneer. Verena shares how she went from independent filmmaking — a world constrained by gatekeepers, budgets, and slow-moving studios — to helping shape the very AI tools that will define the next era of filmmaking. At Dream Lab LA, she and her team work directly with both creators and major Hollywood studios to test, refine, and reimagine workflows for an AI-first future. With an insider’s view of how studios are cautiously adopting AI and how independent artists are rapidly experimenting with it, Verena explains why this moment is unlike any shift before — and why it represents both an incredible opportunity and a cultural responsibility. She also breaks down: Why AI gives independent creators agency and bypasses Hollywood gatekeepersHow Dream Lab LA partners with studios to design workflows, not just toolsThe real legal and ethical challenges around copyright, and how to navigate themWhy documentation, transparency, and trust are essential for creators using AIHow AI artists and traditional crew roles can collaborate in hybrid productionsWhy this era could finally democratize storytelling — making way for voices far beyond Hollywood Whether you’re an artist trying to understand how to adapt your craft, or an executive looking at the future of studio production, Verena offers a candid, inspiring look at the creative playground AI is opening up. Technically Creative by KoobrikLabs explores how technology and creativity collide to shape the future of entertainment.

    47 min.
  5. Why Disney vs. MidJourney Could Rewrite Hollywood’s IP Playbook

    9. SEP.

    Why Disney vs. MidJourney Could Rewrite Hollywood’s IP Playbook

    In this episode of Technically Creative, Orlando Wood sits down with Rob Rosenberg, partner at Moses Singer and managing director of MS Strategic Solutions. With a career spanning advertising, entertainment, and more than two decades at Showtime, including most recently as EVP and General Counsel, Rosenberg brings a rare perspective to the frontlines of law, media, and digital transformation. From the rise of streaming to today’s battles over copyright, AI, and deepfakes, Rosenberg has been at the intersection of every major entertainment shift. He now shares his insights in The Technotainment Scorecard, a weekly Substack where he unpacks the industry’s thorniest questions. In this conversation, Rosenberg explains why “asking for forgiveness, not permission” won’t work in the age of generative AI, how Disney’s lawsuit against MidJourney could reset legal precedent, and what kinds of deals studios should be striking right now to protect their crown jewels of IP. He also warns of the risks: from deepfake abuse to AI models threatening job pipelines, and explores whether a federal “compulsory licensing” law might be the only way forward. Orlando and Rob uncover: Why copyright law must serve both protection and inspirationHow the Disney v. MidJourney case could redefine fair useWhy deepfakes represent the next major legal battlefrontHow studios can strike smart AI licensing deals without repeating the Netflix mistakeWhat new contract clauses and union provisions mean for actors and creatorsThe hidden opportunities in cable spinoffs and the coming return of bundles

    55 min.

Om

Technically Creative by KoobrikLabs explores how technology and AI are transforming the creative industries. In a world where creativity and technology increasingly intersect, artists, designers, and storytellers need to embrace new tools to streamline workflows, eliminate inefficiencies, and unlock their full potential. How can AI enhance the creative process without replacing the human touch? What emerging technologies are reshaping content production? How can creative teams stay ahead in a tech-driven landscape? These are the questions that our host, Orlando Wood, seeks to answer on this show. In each episode, we sit down with leaders from media, entertainment, publishing, advertising, and beyond to uncover how they’re leveraging technology to elevate creativity and solve industry-specific challenges. You can learn more about Koobrik Labs at KoobrikLabs - KoobrikLabs 045657

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