AI has crept into almost every part of our lives over the last few years, and whether we like it or not, it’s clearly here to stay. Speaking at Variety and CNN’s town hall event at the University of Texas, Matthew McConaughey weighed in on the technology’s rise and floated the idea that AI actors could someday infiltrate the Oscars, perhaps sooner than we think.
Matthew McConaughey on AI
“It’s coming. It’s already here,” McConaughey said. “Don’t deny it. It’s not going to be enough to sit on the sidelines and make the moral plea that, ‘No, this is wrong.’ It’s not gonna last. There’s too much money to be made, and it’s too productive. So I say: Own yourself. Voice, likeness, et cetera. Trademark it. Whatever you gotta do, so when it comes, no one can steal you.“
Earlier this year, McConaughey secured a handful of trademarks from the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office (including “Alright, alright, alright!”) in an effort to protect his voice and likeness from unauthorized AI use. Of course, as we’ve seen, copyrights really don’t mean a thing for many of these AI generators.
He continued, “It’s damn sure going to infiltrate our category. Does it become another category? Will we be, in five years, having ‘the best AI film’? ‘The best AI actor?’ Maybe. I think that might be the thing; it becomes another category. It’s gonna be in front of us in ways that we don’t even see. It’s going to get so good we’re not going to know the difference. That’s one of the big questions right now: the question of reality. It’s more hazy than ever — in a very exciting way, I think, but also a scary way. Prep for it. Own your own lane, so you at least have agency when it starts to trespass.“
Timothée Chalamet Has His Own Thoughts
Joining McConaughey on stage, Timothée Chalamet told the students in the crowd that they’ll be the ones who truly have to figure out what it means to live with AI.
“It’s going to be all of our war to wage — sounds confrontational, I don’t mean to say it like that — but it’s a dual responsibility,” Chalamet said. “Unfortunately for your generation, I think it’s going to be you guys that figure out how to integrate it. There’s a huge [responsibility for] people that are positions of power now, like myself, like Matthew, to safekeep so that doors stay open. Some of the roles I got that helped kickstart my career, I wouldn’t even know if they’re available today.“
“There’s a level of fatalism I feel,” Chalamet continued. “It will be on your generation, and mine to an extent, to know how to ethically integrate it, if at all, or do away with it. But the fatalist in me feels like this stuff is coming. And the dreamer in me wants to go, ‘Hey, if it enables a 19-year-old to produce something they couldn’t otherwise because there’s gatekeepers standing in the way, then [good].’ But ultimately, it’s not my place to say.“
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