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📰 AI Automation Is Reshaping Newsrooms, and the Bigger Lesson Is About Shrinking Production Cycles Everywhere
Some of the clearest signals about the future of work often show up first in industries where time pressure is constant. Newsrooms are one of those environments. They live inside tight deadlines, high output demands, rapid context shifts, and constant pressure to balance speed with accuracy. That is why the current wave of AI in journalism matters far beyond media. It offers a preview of what happens when organizations try to shorten production cycles without letting quality collapse. The deeper lesson is not just that newsrooms are automating. It is that they are being forced to redesign how work moves. And that is a useful lens for every team trying to reclaim time with AI. The real opportunity is not simply to produce more, faster. It is to build workflows that reduce delay, protect verification, and keep pace from turning into chaos. ------------- Context ------------- Most teams are now dealing with some version of the same challenge. Expectations are rising faster than capacity. More content, more communication, more reporting, more responsiveness, more visible output. At the same time, attention is fragmented, review cycles are slow, and people are stretched across too many tasks. The result is a familiar kind of pressure, a constant demand to move faster without enough structural change to make that speed sustainable. Newsrooms feel this problem in an especially concentrated form. They have to gather information, verify it, shape it, edit it, publish it, and often adapt it across formats in very short windows. There is very little room for waste in that cycle. If the production model is clumsy, delay shows up immediately. If verification breaks, the consequences are immediate too. That is why AI is such a live conversation there. Not because journalism suddenly wants less rigor, but because the old production burden is too heavy for the pace now required. AI becomes appealing when it can reduce the drag around transcription, summarization, clipping, formatting, adaptation, and the repetitive assembly work that slows everything down before higher-value judgment can happen.
📰 AI Automation Is Reshaping Newsrooms, and the Bigger Lesson Is About Shrinking Production Cycles Everywhere
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New ChatGPT Model & Memory Features Explained (AI News You Can Use)
In this video, I break down the big updates from OpenAI including a new default model for all users in ChatGPT called GPT-5.5 Instant plus some important updates to how Memories function. I'll show off some live testing, benchmark results from the AI Advantage research team, and ends the video by covering some smaller stories that I feel should still be on your radar. Enjoy!
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The Reason I Refused To Quit
Everybody wants success until success starts testing them. Because eventually this journey asks a question most people aren’t prepared for: “How bad do you really want it?” Not when things are easy. Not when the money starts coming in. Not when everyone is cheering you on. I mean when you’re doubting yourself. When nothing seems to be working. When you’re exhausted. When you feel embarrassed. When you fail publicly. When it would honestly be easier to quit. That’s the moment your WHY matters. For me, it was my mom. Mother’s Day always reminds me of this… I watched my mom work herself to exhaustion trying to provide for us. Multiple jobs. Constant stress. Doing the best she could with what she had. And as a kid, I remember the moments that stuck with me most weren’t the things we didn’t have…It was watching how hard she worked and realizing she still couldn’t buy back time. She missed games. Missed moments. Missed parts of life because survival demanded everything from her. I remember thinking very early on: “One day I’m going to change this.” Not because I wanted fancy things. Not because I cared about looking successful. I just wanted freedom. Freedom for her. Choices for her. Relief for her. That became the thing I held onto anytime life punched me in the face. And trust me, there were a LOT of moments where quitting would’ve been easier. But when your reason is emotional enough, you find another gear. That’s the part people don’t talk about enough. Success is rarely about intelligence alone. It’s usually about emotional conviction. The people who make it have something that pulls them forward when motivation disappears. So, I’d love to ask you: What’s the reason behind your drive? Who are you fighting for when life gets hard? P.S. Happy Mother’s Day to all the moms out there doing their best, carrying more than anyone sees, and loving through it all. You’re appreciated more than you know. ❤️
Dry Bones Archive: Building a Recurring AI Universe
One of the strangest AI experiments I've built accidentally turned into a full recurring universe. One of the strangest AI experiments I've built accidentally turned into a full recurring universe. It started as a simple question: what if a skeleton tried to survive corporate life for 7 days? That one-off joke has since evolved into a deadpan procedural archive series with recurring lore, cinematic AI scenes, VHS-style case files, and original soundtrack assets. The biggest thing I learned is that the more seriously the world treats the skeleton, the funnier the project becomes. The skeleton doesn't know he's funny. That's the whole thing. First episodes are already pulling strong engagement, shares, and subscriber conversion, and I'm genuinely curious where this archive goes next.
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Dry Bones Archive: Building a Recurring AI Universe
If everything feels important, nothing really moves.
Most people don’t have an effort problem. They have an aim problem. If everything feels important, nothing really moves. When things feel busy but not productive, I always come back to this: What’s the actual goal right now? Not five goals. Not the big vision. Right now. More leads? More sales? More time back? Then get brutally honest about what’s in the way. No leads usually means you’re not getting enough attention. Leads but no sales usually means something isn’t connecting. Sales but you’re overwhelmed usually means your systems aren’t there yet. That’s the work. Not a new strategy every week. Not ten different projects at once. Just fixing the thing that’s slowing everything else down. Where people get stuck is they start doing a little bit of everything. Tweaking the brand. Building something new. Testing another idea. It feels productive. It looks productive. But nothing actually moves. Instead, look at what’s already showing signs of working and build on that. If something is getting attention, do more of it. If something is converting, improve it. If something is taking too much of your time, fix or automate it. That’s where leverage comes from. And yes, tools like AI can help you go faster. But only if you’re pointed in the right direction first. Otherwise you’re just speeding up the wrong things. At the end of the day, this is simpler than people make it. If what you’re doing isn’t helping you get attention, make a sale, or buy your time back, it’s probably not the priority. You don’t need more. You need focus. That’s how momentum actually starts to build. So let me ask you this: What’s the one thing in your business that, if you fixed it right now, would make everything else easier?
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