At the annual Cannes Lions festival in France, Neal Mohan delved into the past, present, and future of YouTube. As the YouTube CEO reminisced about 20 years of videos and shared some stats that underscore the platform’s current day platform, he looked ahead by announcing that the hyperrealistic Veo 3 generative AI model will soon make its debut on YouTube Shorts.
Shorts has grown rapidly since its launch more than four years ago, and YouTube’s recent decision to take a more liberal approach to the format’s view counts has furthered its expansion — at least in terms of raw numbers. Mohan announced that Shorts now averages 200 billion daily views. That’s a mind-boggling stat, though we wouldn’t be doing our jobs if we didn’t remind everyone that YouTube counts all Shorts feed impressions as views — and therefore your mileage may vary regarding the import of YouTube’s round-number viewership milestones.
YouTube Shorts’ impact goes far beyond the raw viewership data. Mohan noted that TV is the most-watched screen for more than half of the world’s 100 most-watched YouTube channels, and he also claimed that the platform’s AI-powered language dubbing tool has been used to translate more than 20 million videos. From mobile-oriented vertical feeds to living room TV sets, YouTube currently dominates the entertainment world.
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“Today, YouTube is the epicenter of culture,” Mohan said. “I’m not talking about forgettable fads or one-hit-wonders we scroll right past. I mean culture with a capital ‘C.’ The place where day after day, year after year, the events, conversations and voices that define the moment break through and leave their mark.”
New AI innovations are on the way to help YouTube consolidate that dominance. Veo 3 has shocked observers by generative lifelike clips that invoke popular YouTube trends. Its arrival on YouTube Shorts “later this summer” will add a powerful new tool to an AI arsenal that already includes creator-facing features like Dream Screen.
Mohan argued that Veo 3 will “push the limits of human creativity,” allowing YouTube’s community to carry on the creator revolution. Of course, some creators are more worried about Veo putting them out of work than they are excited about the model’s potential. Google’s powerful AI tools will ensure the Shorts numbers keep going up — though viewers will have to be extra vigiliant if they want to recognize all of the machine-generated videos that are coming to their vertical feeds.