Close Menu
  • Home
  • Financial
  • News
  • Personal Finance
  • Real Estate
  • Debt Relief
  • Subscribe Now
What's Hot

JPMorgan, BofA will match the $1,000 ‘Trump Accounts’ for employees’ children. Here’s how to open an account | Fortune

January 28, 2026

What the HUD’s Annual Report on the FHA Reveals About 2026’s Housing Market

January 28, 2026

What Is An Appraisal Contingency? When to Include One in Your Offer

January 28, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
creditreddit.org
Subscribe Now
  • Home
  • Financial
  • News
  • Personal Finance
  • Real Estate
  • Debt Relief
  • Subscribe Now
creditreddit.org
Home » Actress Natasha Lyonne dropped out of NYU and watched movies at the Film Forum instead. Now, she’s helping to shape the future of AI. | Fortune
Financial

Actress Natasha Lyonne dropped out of NYU and watched movies at the Film Forum instead. Now, she’s helping to shape the future of AI. | Fortune

joshBy joshDecember 10, 2025No Comments4 Mins Read0 Views
Facebook Twitter Pinterest Telegram LinkedIn Tumblr Copy Link Email
Follow Us
Google News Flipboard
Actress Natasha Lyonne dropped out of NYU and watched movies at the Film Forum instead. Now, she’s helping to shape the future of AI. | Fortune
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email Copy Link



The actress, director, and wild-style futurist Natasha Lyonne is fascinated by technology. She speaks of the beauty and power of interstellar travel and muses about living long enough to walk a Hollywood red carpet as a reanimated cyborg.

But she also has a grave concern, she explained to Fortune’s Brainstorm AI audience on Monday in San Francisco: With all this boundless possibility, why is AI focused on replacing screenwriters instead of, say, figuring out a solution to fixing plastic bottles polluting the oceans? “I don’t think that’s an accident,”  said Lyonne, 46. “It’s about cutting costs.”

What the co-founder of the media production company Animal Pictures would like to see is people paid for their expertise, work, and creative ideas, and the democratization of filmmaking so more people can engage in a business that has traditionally had sky-high barriers to entry.

Her rallying cry to C-suites and AI leaders—delivered in her signature wry, New York City accent—is to think really hard about what it means to be human in this age where AI is all the rage, and act accordingly. “We are the ones who are deciding what this use is going to be and how we choose to use it,” Lyonne said. “I really want this to mean a seat at the table for more people to do even more extraordinary things.”

Lyonne, who was named one of TIME’s 100 Most Influential People in AI 2025, joked that she anointed herself CEO of Animal Pictures and updated her LinkedIn with the title because it “seemed like a vibe.” So Lyonne now technically shares the title with others in the C-suite, and she observes a widening divide between senior executives of the world who are deciding how AI will be implemented in companies, and the employees who could see their jobs and opportunities dry up. Even though this moment in AI development includes outside factors like competition with China and meeting Wall Street’s expectations, she argues that the industry must remember that there are serious decisions to be made that history will remember. 

Lyonne, who has been in the film business since she was a child actor, pointed out that it takes enormous human legwork—from casts, crews, and everyone from drivers to the creatives who bring ideas onto screens—to keep film and television plodding forward. AI companies that scrape content without permission or payment are neglecting that entire ecosystem, she said. “So I don’t think it’s super-Kosher copacetic to just kind of rob freely under the auspices of acceleration or China, right?”

The Russian Doll and Poker Face star is also a co-founder of Asteria Film Co., a generative AI film and animation studio. Asteria describes itself as being powered by the “first clean AI model”—the “clean” referring to AI that has been trained on models with creative work that is licensed or cleared, rather than content used without payment or permission.  She is also directing an upcoming film called Uncanny Valley using an AI video model called Marey that was created based on copy-right cleared, licensed data. The film reportedly doesn’t include AI actors, but it will blend generative AI filmmaking techniques with traditional human-led filmmaking.

As a child, she said, she studied Talmudic texts and interpretations in Aramaic—the ancient language used in Talmudic writings. The complexity in exploring layers of meaning and iterations of theory now informs her approach to AI in filmmaking., she said.

Lyonne said she dropped out of New York University to pursue a self-taught education in film at the indie movie theater The Film Forum. When asked what advice she’d give her younger teenage self, Lyonne suggested mastery of the kind that takes 10,000 hours of work to develop. “Really, really learn these tools,” she said. “It’s really about technique, and that takes a long time… that’s how you learn how to write and all that.”

The beauty of mastering a skill and knowing how to think and create is that then you can break those rules, said Lyonne. “I’m not so much interested in raging against the machine,” she said. “I’m interested in building new houses, new seats at the table.”

Actress dropped Film Fortune Forum future helping Lyonne movies Natasha NYU shape shes watched
Follow on Google News Follow on Flipboard
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Telegram Email Copy Link
josh
  • Website

Related Posts

JPMorgan, BofA will match the $1,000 ‘Trump Accounts’ for employees’ children. Here’s how to open an account | Fortune

By joshJanuary 28, 2026

Mountain lion saunters through San Francisco’s posh Pacific Heights neighborhood before capture | Fortune

By joshJanuary 27, 2026

Carrier strike group with stealth fighters arrives in Mideast as Trump weighs Iran attack while Air Force jets and cargo planes also head to region | Fortune

By joshJanuary 26, 2026

Moderate Sen. Rosen says Noem’s conduct is ‘deeply shameful’ and urges impeachment as fury grows over Minneapolis shooting | Fortune

By joshJanuary 25, 2026

After deadly shooting by immigration agents, Texas Dems running for Senate say ‘clean house’ at ICE and ‘take that money back’ | Fortune

By joshJanuary 24, 2026

Homeless outreach nonprofits bulldozed a tent with a man sleeping inside, lawsuit says | Fortune

By joshJanuary 23, 2026
Add A Comment
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Top Posts

How to Build a More Predictable Financial Routine

November 24, 2025233 Views

Social Security payments to go up 2.8% next year while polls show three-fourths of seniors think 3% isn’t enough to keep up with rising prices | Fortune

October 24, 202542 Views

Trump Floats 50-Year Mortgages: Cash Flow Boost or Affordability Illusion?

November 13, 202540 Views

Why Mortgage Rates are Rising as the Fed Keeps Cutting

November 4, 202533 Views
Don't Miss

JPMorgan, BofA will match the $1,000 ‘Trump Accounts’ for employees’ children. Here’s how to open an account | Fortune

January 28, 20264 Mins Read0 Views

JPMorgan Chase and Bank of America are stepping up to bolster President Donald Trump’s new…

What the HUD’s Annual Report on the FHA Reveals About 2026’s Housing Market

January 28, 2026

What Is An Appraisal Contingency? When to Include One in Your Offer

January 28, 2026

Mountain lion saunters through San Francisco’s posh Pacific Heights neighborhood before capture | Fortune

January 27, 2026
Demo
Our Picks

JPMorgan, BofA will match the $1,000 ‘Trump Accounts’ for employees’ children. Here’s how to open an account | Fortune

January 28, 2026

What the HUD’s Annual Report on the FHA Reveals About 2026’s Housing Market

January 28, 2026

What Is An Appraisal Contingency? When to Include One in Your Offer

January 28, 2026
Most Popular

Trump’s trade deals are illegal, Piper Sandler warns, predicting a Supreme Court smackdown by June 2026 | Fortune

July 25, 20250 Views

The markets’ reaction to Trump hides a darker truth that puts the American economy at risk, Piper Sandler warns | Fortune

August 26, 20250 Views

Investors Are Controlling the Housing Market

September 4, 20250 Views
  • Home
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Subscribe Now
© 2026 ThemeSphere.

Terms & Conditions | Privacy Policy

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.