48 lines
4 KiB
Markdown
48 lines
4 KiB
Markdown
---
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type: source
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title: "McKinsey: What AI could mean for film and TV production — distributors capture majority of value"
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author: "McKinsey & Company"
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url: https://www.mckinsey.com/industries/technology-media-and-telecommunications/our-insights/what-ai-could-mean-for-film-and-tv-production-and-the-industrys-future
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date: 2026-01-01
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domain: entertainment
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secondary_domains: [ai-alignment]
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format: report
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status: unprocessed
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priority: high
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tags: [ai-entertainment, value-capture, distribution, mckinsey, producers-vs-distributors]
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---
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## Content
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McKinsey report on AI's impact on film and TV production (January 2026, 20+ industry leader interviews).
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**Value capture analysis:**
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- Seven distributors account for ~84% of US content spend
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- ~$60 billion of revenue could be redistributed within 5 years of mass AI adoption
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- ~$10 billion of forecast US original content spend could be addressable by AI in 2030
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- In previous tech shifts (digital transition), distributors gained majority of value through higher profit margins
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- Similar redistribution expected with AI due to: structural fragmentation of producers, concentration of distributors, budget transparency
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**Who captures value:**
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- Distributors positioned to capture MAJORITY of value from AI-driven workflow efficiency gains
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- Structural dynamics: crowded producer market, consolidating buyer landscape, budget transparency
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- Producers with strong IP and tech investment can capture some value
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- Production service providers (VFX, SFX) face most pressure from automation
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**Historical pattern:**
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- Previous digital disruption: distributors captured savings, not producers
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- 35% content spend contraction pattern documented in prior shifts
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- Producer fragmentation prevents collective bargaining
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## Agent Notes
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**Why this matters:** This is the key challenge to my attractor state's "community-owned" configuration. If distributors always capture AI value, then AI cost collapse doesn't empower communities — it empowers YouTube, Netflix, and Walmart. The 84% concentration figure and historical precedent are strong evidence.
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**What surprised me:** The report doesn't distinguish between studio IP and community IP at all. It assumes the producer-distributor structure is fixed. This is the blind spot — community IP may dissolve this structural separation, but McKinsey doesn't model it.
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**What I expected but didn't find:** Any analysis of how community-owned IP or creator-owned distribution changes the value capture dynamics. McKinsey models the INCUMBENT structure, not the disrupted structure.
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**KB connections:** [[when profits disappear at one layer of a value chain they emerge at an adjacent layer through the conservation of attractive profits]], [[the media attractor state is community-filtered IP with AI-collapsed production costs where content becomes a loss leader for the scarce complements of fandom community and ownership]]
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**Extraction hints:** Claim about distributor structural advantage in AI value capture. Counter-claim: this model assumes producer-distributor separation that community IP dissolves. The 84% concentration and $60B redistribution figures are critical data points.
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**Context:** McKinsey TMT practice, high credibility for structural analysis. But the report's structural assumptions may not hold for community-owned IP models that didn't exist when the framework was built.
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## Curator Notes (structured handoff for extractor)
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PRIMARY CONNECTION: when profits disappear at one layer of a value chain they emerge at an adjacent layer through the conservation of attractive profits
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WHY ARCHIVED: Key CHALLENGE to attractor state model — if distributor concentration captures AI value regardless, community-owned configuration is weaker than modeled. But the model's blind spot (no community IP analysis) is itself informative.
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EXTRACTION HINT: The extractable claim is about the structural dynamics (84% concentration, fragmented producers), NOT the prediction (distributors will capture value). The prediction depends on structural assumptions that community IP challenges.
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