We Are Video Producers in 2026. Here Is Exactly How We Are Using AI
Every week someone asks us about AI.
Usually it is a client who wants to know if they should be using it to save money. Sometimes it is another producer who wants to know what tools we have adopted. And occasionally it is someone who wants to argue that AI is going to replace all of us.
I get it. The conversation is everywhere. It is loud and it is confusing and it changes every three months.
So let me tell you exactly how we are using AI at Skyrex Productions in 2026. The good, the boring, and the lines we will not cross.
What we actually use AI for
The truth is less exciting than the headlines.
We use AI for transcription. When we shoot interviews, we need to find specific quotes quickly. AI transcription tools turn hours of footage into searchable text in minutes. That saves our editors time and saves our clients money.
We use AI for rough logging. Before an editor starts cutting, someone needs to watch all the footage and mark the good moments. AI helps with the first pass so humans can focus on the actual creative decisions.
We use AI to generate draft captions for social media. When we finish a video, we need short captions for Instagram, TikTok, and LinkedIn. AI can look at the transcript and suggest options. We edit them. We make them sound human. But the first draft is faster.
We use AI for metadata. When we upload videos to our system, we need keywords and descriptions so we can find things later. AI helps with that.
That is it. That is the list.
What we do not use AI for
Here is where it gets interesting.
We do not use AI to generate scripts. Our clients have stories to tell. Those stories come from real people with real experiences. A language model trained on the internet cannot tell those stories better than the people who lived them.
We do not use AI to generate synthetic actors or voiceovers. There is a trend right now where companies create fake humans to read fake scripts. It saves money. It also saves soul. Audiences can tell the difference. They might not know why a video feels hollow, but they feel it.
We do not use AI to edit interviews into things people never said. The technology exists to make someone say words they never spoke. That is not filmmaking. That is fraud. We will not do it.
Why the boring stuff matters
Transcription and logging do not sound exciting. But here is why they matter.
Every hour we save on administrative work is an hour our editors can spend on actual storytelling. Every minute we shave off the logging process is a minute we can spend on color grading or sound design.
AI is not replacing filmmakers. It is replacing drudgery.
The creative decisions still belong to humans. What shot to use. What quote to feature. What music fits the mood. How to structure a story so it lands right. Those things require taste and empathy and experience. AI has none of those things.
What clients are actually asking us
When clients ask about AI, they usually have two fears.
Fear one: If I do not use AI, am I wasting money and falling behind?
Fear two: If I do use AI, will my video look cheap and fake?
Both fears are reasonable. Here is how we answer them.
On falling behind: The production companies that succeed with AI will be the ones that use it to work smarter, not the ones that use it to replace craft. If your editor spends three hours transcribing interviews by hand, that is three hours they cannot spend making your video beautiful. Using AI for that boring work lets them focus on what matters.
On looking cheap: The audience does not care what tools you used. They care how the final video makes them feel. If you use AI to generate a fake spokesperson, they will feel nothing. If you use AI to speed up your workflow so you can spend more time on a real human story, they will feel everything.
The hunger for human work
Here is the interesting thing we are seeing in 2026.
As AI content floods the internet, human-made work becomes more valuable. Audiences are getting better at spotting the difference. They crave real stories told by real people. They want imperfection. They want authenticity.
That is good news for anyone who still believes in craft.
The tools change. The need for real human connection does not.
Where we stand
At Skyrex, we are filmmakers first and technology users second. We adopt tools that help us tell better stories. We reject tools that would let us tell lazy ones.
We have commercial clients who trust us with their brands. We have nonprofit partners who know we will treat their people with dignity.
None of that happened because we found a shortcut. It happened because we showed up and did the work.
If you want a video partner who thinks about this stuff so you do not have to, let us talk. We would love to hear about your next project.
By
Gokan Akyaz
Creative Director
