5 Burning Questions Hollywood Should Ask After Trump’s AI Executive OrderFrom guilds to Gavin Newsom: what studios and creatives need to reckon with nowI cover the intersection of Hollywood and AI for paid subscribers. I dove into Disney’s deal with OpenAI, how AI search is disrupting Hollywood discovery, what AI performer Tilly Norwood means for actors and how the tech is threatening other jobs across Hollywood.If you thought Hollywood’s AI drama was already hot — writers arguing with chat-bots, actors replaced by digital doubles, VFX artists watching their craft slip into code — wait till you see what’s unfolding in the West Wing. Last Thursday, President Trump signed an executive order designed to create a “national AI policy framework” and challenge state AI laws across the country. Critics call it a legal Hail Mary, constitutional overreach and a recipe for courtroom gridlock. But there’s an uncomfortable truth beneath the political theater: If the U.S. doesn’t innovate and set the rules, others — notably China — could, and those aggressive moves abroad could have direct consequences for studios and the film and television industry writ large. Throughout 2025 Trump has stressed that the U.S. must reduce regulatory “red tape” so that American AI companies don’t have to navigate “50 different approvals from 50 different states” every time they want to innovate — with California being ground zero for both Trump’s political acrimony and also where Big Tech and Big Media will inevitably collide on this issue. When not busy rage-tweeting at California’s governor, Trump has painted state AI rules as a drag on competitiveness, insisting a national standard is necessary to “win the AI race.” That phrase — win the AI race — sounds like campaign sloganeering until you look at the facts: AI is already a cornerstone of economic growth (as seen through the massive acceleration in AI search and AI video content), military modernization as seen through drone piloting and surveillance systems like Palantir’s Foundry, and industrial transformation for nations around the world through predictive maintenance of farm tools (to give just one example). It’s also (mostly) what the stock market is hanging its hat on these days. If AI is perceived as a bubble, and it pops, it will surely take the entire stock market down with it, as the “magnificent seven” (Google parent Alphabet, Amazon, Apple, Meta Platforms, Microsoft, Nvidia, Tesla) account for the majority of stock appreciation this year. Meanwhile, across the Pacific, China is not twiddling its thumbs. Chinese models and AI applications — bolstered by Jensen Huang effectively lobbying Trump to overturn a ban on selling Nvidia’s H200 chips to Beijing — are gaining traction faster than many expected, and breakthroughs like competitive large language models from firms like DeepSeek and meme-creators like Kling have rattled Silicon Valley and Hollywood. OpenAI — not the most obvious Trump ally — sent a policy letter in October noting that Chinese AI advancements are closing the gap on U.S. capabilities and urging shifts in training data policy to keep American models ahead. And bipartisan lawmakers are even trying to block Chinese AI systems from federal use altogether, citing national security concerns. So yes, on one level Trump, when not tweeting awful things about Rob Reiner, is not wrong to frame AI leadership as a global competition. If the U.S. loses its innovative edge, the economic, cultural and strategic costs could ripple outward — from national defense to every industry touched by AI, including Hollywood. In today’s newsletter, I’ll get into five urgent questions for Hollywood in the wake of Trump’s move:
This column is for paid subscribers only. Interested in a group sub for your team or company? Click here. For full access and to continue reading all Ankler content, paid subscribers can click here. Got a tip or story pitch? Email tips@theankler.com ICYMI from The AnklerThe Wakeup Netflix whiffs latest WB movie biz pitch Hollywood 2026: Collapse or Comeback? Let’s Talk Odds Richard Rushfield finds reasons for actual hope as we stumble and bumble into the new year Hollywood Took Your Job. The Holidays Can Help You Get Your Next One Advice from top leadership coach Lacey Leone McLaughlin on navigating parties, family and awkward questions when your career is anything but jolly Need to Sell a Film or TV Show? Just Add Christmas Reps and filmmakers tell Ashley Cullins how a Yuletide twist can turn any story into a greenlight Hollywood’s Breaking Faster Than Film Schools Can Teach It. Inside the Scramble to Keep Up Professors are rewriting syllabi on the fly as studios melt, algorithms rule and screens go vertical, Elaine Low reports Rob Reiner and a Terrible Weekend Richard on the murder of the director and his wife A Writer’s Guide to Loving the Netflix–Warner Bros. Deal Joel Stein wonders, what’s the worst that could happen? TV in 3: HBO’s Horny Hockey Hunks Go Viral; CBS Showrunner Scramble Plus: Starz’s Shohei Ohtani home run Ellison’s Warner Bros. Bid: A One-Man Toxic Spill Our newest studio chief’s debut keeps getting worse, Richard writes When Mickey Met Sam Altman — and What It Means for Every Other Studio Now Scorched by the Streaming Wars, Bob Iger won’t let Mickey Mouse be steamrolled by Big Tech again, writes Erik Barmack 12 C-Suite Execs on the ‘Existential’ Fallout of a Warners Deal and the ‘Least Bad’ Outcome Lesley Goldberg reports on why the acquisition could be as destabilizing for the buyer as it is for the rest of Hollywood Small-Town Theaters vs. Studios: ‘It Doesn’t Feel Like the Industry Wants Us to Survive’ Cinema owners tell Matthew Frank the two-week mandatory run for movies is crushing them Rob Reiner, Hollywood Mensch; Emily Blunt on the Emotional Toll of The Smashing Machine The Oscar nominee also tells Katey Rich about the great note she got from Christopher Nolan Delroy Lindo on the Sinners Note Ryan Coogler Gave Him That Changed Everything Plus: Dreaming of Sundance and next year’s contenders (already) 🎬 Rob Reiner’s ‘Towering Career’ Remembered Katey, Richard and Christopher Rosen examine a memorable life 🎬 New from Ankler Studio! Joel Edgerton Had Twins. Train Dreams Channeled His Emotions About Parenthood Main Character, our video series about the best lead performances in film & TV, debuts with the Australian star 🎧 Charlie Hunnam: ‘Purpose is Derived From Doing Something Very, Very Difficult’ The Monster star earned rave reviews — and award noms — for playing serial killer Ed Gein. But he tells Katey he’s got his eye on a next act More from Ankler MediaNew from Natalie Jarvey’s creator economy newsletter: Patreon’s CEO on Poaching Substack Stars — and Why Meta Feeds Are Headed for Full AI Netflix’s Pod Pitch Lands Flat; Fox Comes for YouTube; Yeezy Alum Drops New App Andy Lewis’ latest IP picks: A Beef-Like Revenge Thriller & The Secret History meets Alice in Wonderland Granny vs. Goliath, a Real-Life Reacher and Blade Runner for the VR Era |




