Generative AI
LLMs, copilots and broadcast-grade generative media.
From enterprise assistants grounded in your own knowledge to TV-ready generative video campaigns: we put generative models to work with studio discipline — retrieval, evaluation, brand control and licensed audio, not improvisation.
The problem
Generic chatbots hallucinate your prices, your policies and your tone. Without retrieval grounded in your own data and evaluation before release, a copilot is a liability with a friendly interface.
Improvised AI video is instantly recognizable: faces that morph, distorted logos, unreadable text. Without continuity discipline, generation stays a gadget — six weeks of classic production remains the default.
Our method
Grounded assistants
RAG pipelines over your real documents with pgvector, source citation, and evaluation sets that gate every release.
Anchored art direction
Every video shot starts from a validated anchor image: exact product, palette, lighting. Generation respects that reference, shot after shot.
Multi-shot generation
One multi-shot generation instead of fourteen stitched clips: native continuity, clean transitions, cost divided by four.
Voice, music, mastering
Multilingual voiceover, licensed original music, sound design. One coherent audio bed, mixed to broadcast standards.
Measured results
- 48 h
- 15-second spot ready to broadcast
- −77 %
- Generation cost vs shot-by-shot method
- 89
- Shorts scheduled by a single pipeline
Stack
- Claude
- OpenAI
- Seedance
- Veo
- ElevenLabs
- Remotion
Frequently asked questions
Is AI video quality really broadcast-ready?+
Yes — under strict discipline: anchor images, controlled continuity, audio mixed to standard. We have produced multi-language brand spots that aired in real campaigns, not laboratory tests.
Can you respect our brand guidelines?+
That's the starting point. Product, logo, palette and typography are locked in a campaign bible that constrains every generation. Anything that deviates is regenerated.
Who owns the rights to the content produced?+
You do. Voices and music are generated under commercial licenses, and masters are delivered with their composition sources.