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. ElevenLabs, the AI Voice Factory; with Dan Jasnow

    2D AGO

    ElevenLabs, the AI Voice Factory; with Dan Jasnow

    In this episode of Technically Creative, we sit down with Dan Jasnow, who sits at the intersection of IP, legal, and policy at ElevenLabs, to talk about what copyright, consent, and control look like in the age of AI. Before joining ElevenLabs, Dan spent over a decade advising companies across media, entertainment, and technology on how to navigate intellectual property in a rapidly changing landscape. Now, he’s on the inside — helping shape how one of the world’s leading AI companies approaches voice, licensing, and responsible deployment. As voice becomes a primary interface for interacting with technology, the stakes are changing. Questions around ownership, authorship, and rights are no longer theoretical — they’re operational. Dan shares what actually goes into building AI systems responsibly, how companies can work directly with rights holders rather than around them, and why many of the fears surrounding AI come from a misunderstanding of how these systems are designed and controlled. Orlando and Dan explore: Why voice may become the dominant interface for AI How ElevenLabs approaches consent, licensing, and control The difference between how AI is perceived and how it actually works What changes when you move from advising AI companies to building inside one The evolving role of copyright and fair use in AI development How regulation is struggling to keep pace with innovation Why trust is becoming a competitive advantage in AI It’s a thoughtful, grounded conversation about IP, responsibility, and the future of human and machine interaction — and what it takes to build powerful technology while maintaining trust with the people it affects.

    55 min
  2. Influence into Industry: The Rise of the Creator Economy With Kyle Hjelmeseth

    MAR 31

    Influence into Industry: The Rise of the Creator Economy With Kyle Hjelmeseth

    He’s done $100M in creator deals. What does he know? In this episode of Technically Creative, we sit down with Kyle Hjelmeseth, CEO of GMB Digital Management, to explore how the creator economy has matured into a real industry — and what that means for entertainment, advertising, and anyone building an audience today. Because the model has flipped. Creators no longer wait to be discovered. They build audiences first — and the industry is catching up. Kyle has spent over a decade helping creators turn that attention into real businesses, facilitating over $100M in brand deals, and developing a model he calls: 👉 “monetizing the wake” The idea that creators don’t need to be steered into traditional formats — they keep creating, living their lives, and building value through everything they’ve already made. This conversation explores the evolution of the creator economy from early influencers to a structured, scalable industry — and why the most important shift isn’t technology… It’s ownership of audience. Orlando and Kyle explore: • How the creator economy evolved from “wild west” to mature industry • Why creators can now greenlight themselves • What “monetizing the wake” actually means in practice • How creators make money beyond brand deals (affiliate, licensing, content reuse) • Why traditional entertainment is adapting to audience-first thinking • The shift from gatekeepers to direct audience ownership • How creators build sustainable businesses across platforms • What brands and agencies are still learning about this space It’s a sharp, forward-looking conversation about audience, ownership, and the future of creative work — in a world where distribution is no longer the barrier, and the real advantage is knowing how to build and monetize attention.

    58 min
  3. Celebrating Craft in A World of Infinite Content; Danny Edwards of Shots.net

    MAR 24

    Celebrating Craft in A World of Infinite Content; Danny Edwards of Shots.net

    How do you curate infinite content? GET YOUR TICKETS TO SHOTS OUT OF THE BOX LA 22nd APRIL - https://ootb.shots.net/la-2026/ In this episode of Technically Creative, we sit down with Danny Edwards, co-editor of shots, to explore a simple but increasingly important question: How do you curate infinite content? shots has spent decades spotlighting the best work in advertising, film, and music videos — long before everything was instantly available online. Today, in a world where anyone can publish and the volume of creative output is exploding, that role has only become more valuable. Danny shares how shots evolved from VHS tapes and DVDs into a global digital platform, how editorial taste actually works behind the scenes, and why celebrating great work still matters in an always-on content landscape. This conversation gets into the mechanics of creative curation, the reality of AI in advertising, and the challenge of maintaining standards of craft when everything is available all the time. Orlando and Danny explore: • How shots became a global authority on creative work • What makes something stand out in an oversaturated landscape • The shift from physical media to always-on digital platforms • How AI is influencing the type of work being made • Why taste and curation are becoming more important, not less • How to maintain creative standards in an age of abundance It’s a sharp, thoughtful conversation about attention, taste, and creative judgment — and why knowing what matters is now the most valuable skill in the industry.

    1h 6m
  4. Who Decides What Great Advertising Is?  Kevin Swanepoel from The One Club

    MAR 17

    Who Decides What Great Advertising Is? Kevin Swanepoel from The One Club

    In this episode of Technically Creative, we sit down with Kevin Swanepoel — CEO of The One Club for Creativity and steward of The One Show — to talk about how creative standards are defined in an industry that is constantly reinventing itself. Advertising produces an enormous amount of work every year. Campaigns, films, brand activations, social content, AI experiments. In a world where more creative work is being made than ever before, the question becomes: how do you decide what actually matters? For decades, The One Show has been one of the places where those decisions get made. Known for its emphasis on craft and creative excellence, it has helped define the standards of American advertising while supporting the global creative community through education, mentorship, and initiatives like Creative Week in New York. Kevin shares how The One Club balances celebrating great work with nurturing the next generation of creatives, why awards still play a crucial role in creative culture, and how the organization has expanded its global reach while staying rooted in craft. Orlando and Kevin explore: • How creative awards shape the culture of an industry • Why craft still matters in a world of infinite content • The role of education and mentorship in creative careers • How Creative Week brings the industry together • The challenge of curating great work in the age of AI • Why celebrating creativity is still essential for the future of advertising It’s a thoughtful and often funny conversation about taste, standards, and the responsibility of celebrating great work — at a moment when the creative industries are evolving faster than ever.

    1h 2m
  5. Is AI Killing Art?; Marco Gentile on the Invisible Contract b/t Artist and Audience

    MAR 10

    Is AI Killing Art?; Marco Gentile on the Invisible Contract b/t Artist and Audience

    In this episode of Technically Creative, we sit down with director Marco Gentile of Magna Studios to explore a powerful idea about creativity in the age of AI: what he calls “The Invisible Contract.” For nearly two decades, Marco has worked as a director in advertising, crafting visually meticulous films for brands around the world. But as generative AI rapidly transforms how images, stories, and media can be produced, Marco has begun asking a deeper question — not about technology, but about the relationship between creators and audiences. His thesis is simple: storytelling has always been relational. When an audience watches a film, a commercial, or any piece of communication, they assume a human being stands behind it — someone who made choices, faced constraints, and took responsibility for the meaning being created. The challenge posed by AI isn’t just about automation. It’s about what happens to imagination, authorship, and accountability when creation itself can be delegated to machines. Orlando and Marco explore: Why storytelling relies on an “invisible contract” between creator and audience How friction and constraint shape meaningful creativity The difference between speed and meaning in the creative process Why imagination is a human faculty that must be exercised How generative AI could change the way society produces symbolic meaning What guardrails creative industries might need as AI tools evolve It’s a philosophical and wide-ranging conversation about art, authorship, and the future of creativity — and why preserving human intention may be the most important challenge facing storytellers today.

    1h 11m
  6. Create Without Permission; Jagger Waters on The Creator Economy

    MAR 3

    Create Without Permission; Jagger Waters on The Creator Economy

    In this episode of Technically Creative, we sit down with Jagger Waters — AI filmmaker, creator, and educator — to talk about what authorship looks like in the age of AI. While much of the conversation around AI filmmaking centers on hype or fear, Jagger is focused on something far more practical: craft. From producing nearly solo short films to blending AI with live action and traditional editing workflows, she represents a new kind of creative — one who understands cinematic language and uses AI as leverage, not replacement. As the lines blur between filmmaker and creator, Jagger is navigating both worlds. She’s building work independently, experimenting publicly, and actively helping higher education institutions understand the realities of the creator economy. Jagger shares lessons from producing AI-driven narrative work, the discipline required to move from “prompting” to directing, and why removing the pressure to monetize every idea might be the key to protecting creative voice. Orlando and Jagger explore: Why AI doesn’t replace craft — it exposes it The difference between generating and directing How filmmakers are being pushed into the creator economy What creators can learn from cinematic storytelling Why building publicly accelerates growth How to balance financial survival with creative independence It’s a grounded, forward-looking conversation about control, identity, and the future of storytelling — in a world where anyone can generate, but not everyone can direct.

    54 min
  7. Where Ai And Artists Meet; Dani Van de Sande of Artist and the Machine

    FEB 17

    Where Ai And Artists Meet; Dani Van de Sande of Artist and the Machine

    Get tickets to the next Artist and the Machine event in NYC on May 14th, you can access Early Bird applications on their site: https://artistandthemachine.com/ 2025 Grimes Keynote: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i4LZfOaPifQ In this episode of Technically Creative, Orlando Wood sits down with Dani Van De Sande, founder of Artist and the Machine — one of the most important gatherings anywhere in the world for artists, technologists, and creative leaders working with AI. Artist and the Machine is the leading Summit at the forefront of AI & Creativity. The bi-yearly gathering in LA & NY is known for its elevated, strong curation that fosters inspiration and partnerships across brand innovation leaders, creators, and founders pioneering the future of Human-Machine collaboration. The AI & Creativity Summit returns to NYC on May 14, 2026 to gather 400 handpicked leaders in the space, featuring a Main Stage, bespoke breakout sessions & workshops, and interactive demos. If you’re exploring how AI is transforming creative work - you’ll want to be in this room. Dani has built a rare kind of event: a place where engineers, filmmakers, researchers, and creative directors share a stage and show what they’re actually making right now. Not predictions. Not hype. Real tools, real experiments, and real creative breakthroughs. In this conversation, Dani and Orlando explore the rise of the creative technologist, why artists and engineers need to be in the same room, and how the most interesting work today often couldn’t have existed even a year ago. It’s a thoughtful, optimistic conversation about the people building the future of creativity — and the communities forming around them. 🔍 Highlights include: Why the creative technologist is the defining role of the AI eraHow Artist and the Machine brings artists and engineers togetherThe difference between AI hype and real creative practiceWhy the most interesting work today is happening at the edges of disciplines

    56 min
5
out of 5
7 Ratings

About

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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