D
Deleted member 21838
Guest Shopper
I think most people would be very uneasy being followed by Peter Simon.Natalia is on now who I don’t mind and Lindsey is ok
But then it’s Gen, Mike followed by Peter yuk yuk
I think most people would be very uneasy being followed by Peter Simon.Natalia is on now who I don’t mind and Lindsey is ok
But then it’s Gen, Mike followed by Peter yuk yuk
I thought that was talkbackThe same old act… Says you’ll definitely buy if we drop below £600…£500…£400…£100… A total lack of respect for the intellect of their buyers… Is it a deliberate ploy that you can hear the gallery talkback in his ear? Or a cock-up…Simon gag.. Oh Gawd..the very old somebody has made a massive mistake and priced something too low. I’ve heard it all in 25 years of watching this stuff.. Very little appears genuine…
My pleasure. Any time. Apologies for the slight delay in replying—it's been a busy few days!Great reply, many thanks @RobLocke for taking the time and for your comments and the info. Much appreciated.
Quite so, which is why the SAG strike may be trickier to resolve. AI is undeniably a useful tool, but actors need to be informed, have control over how their likeness is used, and be fairly compensated when it is.The SAG strike concerns over AI, and CGI/virtual actors, potentially signing away a human actor's visual rights in perpetuity for just 1 day's work/pay, or no re-use repeat fees, is even more concerning and thorny than the Writer's strike.
Yep, and that’s what's possible now. Imagine where the technology will be in a few years! There’s also the bigger question of intellectual property being used to train AI in the first place. I predict that there will be standoffs with numerous content sources. The BBC has already blocked ChatGPT from accessing its content. Others will follow suit. Copyright law is going to get even more complex—if AI uses an artist’s work to learn, and then generates images ‘inspired by’ that work, especially for commercial use, who owns the copyright and who gets paid? It’s a massive can of worms that’s only just been opened.(I asked ChatGPT to write a screenplay on a theme of plot points I gave it in a paragraph and it wrote me a full 15-page screenplay script, with stage/film camera directions and added creative points and speech that I never gave it and created a piece I could have sent to Producers for offers!!!)
This is the reason why the writers dug in so deeply, and why the actors continue to do so. It’s a paradigm shift in our industry. If we don’t get protections in place now, the future will be bleak for a lot of people. From an entertainment perspective, ultimately the consumer loses—even basic CGI has taken over film and TV. Instead of being used as a tool to support and enhance a story, often it IS the story. Film, particularly, has suffered (I believe). Flashy CGI set pieces are being used to lazily replace quality narrative. As you say, it truly is a defining moment.I think the SAG and Writers' strikes issues will be a defining moment, critical point we will look back on as one of the first legal and real life issues on the future path we let AI take in real life scenarios involving humans, beyond self-driving cars and automation/robotic safety & legal implications.
Virtual presenters are already being used in certain cases. I can see that's going to increase over time, but, I’d guess, mainly for factual delivery. Until AI has a personality, there’s a measure of protection. If/when GAI is attained, we’re done for!Back on topic: for instance one can envisage a time when the on-screen TV talent, shopping/TV presenter is an AI virtual presenter...
I used to stay in a hotel when I was in Peterborough. The expenses came out of my pocket, so I stayed wherever was cheapest. It’s was fine during the pandemic, when I could get a room for £25/day, but once things started going back to ‘normal’ it became prohibitively expensive. During lockdown, when the hotels closed for everyone except key workers, Ideal put ‘Bunkabins’ in the car park (see picture below). I literally lived in a box for several months, with nowhere else to go when I wasn't on air. It was torturous! Talk about serving your time.Well, if IW do call, their W.London studios will be easier than Peterborough for you! Did you stay over when doing IW up there or travel daily? Just curious.
Absolutely! He's a wonderful guy and we worked together often.Did you ever work/meet with fellow actor Peter Vollebregt on IW?
Peter is a talented actor. He was incredibly helpful when I was in Peterborough and had to record auditions. He filmed and read with me for several projects, including the role I landed in Sky’s COBRA.That led to me searching for some of his TV appearances too. I was pleasantly surprised, seeing him as a priest in TV series River City, he was surprisingly good!
I can't even begin to tell you how grim it truly was. Single bed with a budget mattress, a bit of counter and storage space, and a miniature-scale bathroom. The whole thing was about the size of a single-imnate prison cell (not speaking from experience), and the decor wasn't much better. Spent 18 hours-a-day in that thing. It's a wonder I didn't go a bit strange. Well, any more than normal.That Bunkabin looks grim
Yep. We were car park neighbours. At least the red wine on a summer's eve kept us all going.I watch a lot of Create and Craft, I remember one of there guests Dawn Wheeler, spent months living on site
And the Prosecco LOLYep. We were car park neighbours. At least the red wine on a summer's eve kept us all going.
Normally they’re used for builders working on site, so perhaps for a few days or at most a week.I can't even begin to tell you how grim it truly was. Single bed with a budget mattress, a bit of counter and storage space, and a miniature-scale bathroom. The whole thing was about the size of a single-imnate prison cell (not speaking from experience), and the decor wasn't much better. Spent 18 hours-a-day in that thing. It's a wonder I didn't go a bit strange. Well, any more than normal.
It’s true I dont know if any of you have ever watched Dawn Wheeler, she’s a guest/presenter on Create and Craft, and often mentions about her love of ProseccoAnd the Prosecco LOL