Caitlin Long, Founder & CEO, Avanti Bank & Trust, Nic Carter, General Partner, Castle Island Ventures and Co-Founder, Coin Metrics and Michael Saylor, Chairman and CEO, MicroStrategy, Inc. spoke to Bloomberg Quicktake’s Katie Greifeld about the future for crypto and what’s next in the crypto space. They are at the Bloomberg Financial Innovation Summit.
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And now let’s get started with our first session.
Please join me in welcoming Caitlin Long founder and CEO of
Monte Bank and Trust Nick Carter general partner Castle Island
Ventures and co-founder Quinn Metrics. And Michael Saylor
chairman and CEO of MicroStrategy Inc.
It’s great to have you guys with me. We have three heavy heavy
heavy hitters 30 minutes and a lot to get to. I’m going to start
with the rapid fire question for each of you.
I’m only here in your view.
What has been the most significant development in the
cryptocurrency landscape.
Good or bad in the past year. And Caitlin good to put you on the
spot first. Oh boy. Okay. I would say it was the battle testing
that Bitcoin endured with China kicking the miners out and how
the hash rate in the network fell and came right back up and we
restructured and the bitcoin block chain just keeps on adding
more blocks and it’s even more battle tested and hard. And every
time some external attack like that comes at it it just keeps on
truckin.
Battle tested. I like that word. Nic I know you’ve been
following the mining discussions very closely. I want to ask you
the same question. What’s the most significant development we’ve
seen in the past twelve months.
Yeah the hash rate transition was immense and incredibly
revealing. But for me it was all Salvador legalizing Bitcoin and
acquiring it on its balance sheet. I mean that’s the first non
pariah nation to officially acquire bitcoin. There are others
that we sort of probably believe or it’s implied own bitcoin.
But El Salvador was the first truly integrated nation in our
international system to actually acquire it directly and
vociferously. So that was it for me.
Michael I’m going to get to you in just a moment but Nick I
actually do want to follow up because a lot of people would push
back and say that that roll out came with a lot of glitches a
lot of problem and that it’s a flash in the pan. One time
happening. I mean what would you respond to that.
Well I would distinguish the very real law that was passed
putting Bitcoin on even par with the dollar from the software
itself that was produced by the government and no government
produced software is ever going to be perfect. But you know the
important thing is that they’ve established Bitcoin as a
monetary good. That’s on a completely even par with the existing
monetary asset there.
All right. Fair point. And Michael coming to you same question.
Most significant happening in crypto in last year.
I think the emergence of a political consensus in the Western
world that bit coin is Western technology not Eastern
technology. Following the China crackdown and that Bitcoin is
property and not currency.
And the acknowledgement by the head of the EU Central Bank the
head of the Federal Reserve the head of the FCC Congress
senators that bitcoin is digital property. You can hold it. It
is the standard by which all other properties will be judged.
And I read that as a green light for institutions and mainstream
investors to own Bitcoin in the Western world. I think that’s
the most significant thing that happened this year.
All right. That was a great rapid fire and I want to zero in on
regulation because I mean that’s been the most interesting thing
at least from my perspective that around the world but
particularly in the US when you look to the Federal Reserve the
Treasury Congress all sort of sharpening their focus from a
regulatory lens on crypto. And just this week we had the
president’s working group on financial markets release a report
on stable coins. Those are designed to be linked one for one to
the dollar or some other fiat basically saying that stable coin
issuers essentially need to register at banks. And Caitlin 30
minutes before this panel you had a very tantalizing tweet. You
said that your you’ll give your first public analysis and its
massive impact on crypto. So I want to start with you. I mean
what’s the takeaway. What’s the impact. Well the takeaway is
that every stable coin issuer has to get FDIC insurance now and
the impact on of that is that the Bank Holding Company Act is
going to apply to every stable coin issuer.
What does that mean. I saw a very interesting article yesterday
that the press was starting to figure it out. The press did not
figure out the real impact of all this yet but it started to
yesterday that if Facebook is going to issue DRM then Facebook
itself the holding company would have to become regulated by the
Federal Reserve. Of course that’s not going to happen but that’s
what the Bank Holding Company Act means. It means Federal
Reserve regulation of all the affiliates. And so when I when I
say there’s going to be massive impact on the crypto industry
it’s really on the market structure. It’s not in Bitcoin itself.
Bitcoin is hearing all the all the the actual on chain coins are
going to be fine. But where you’re going to see an impact is in
a lot of the trading stable coins are about 70 percent of the
trading. A stable coin is on the other side of a crypto in about
70 percent of transactions.
And so what the president’s working group paper has done is say
and by the way they don’t need congressional approval to enforce
this. That that stable coin issuers have to get FDIC insurance.
What’s the impact of that. Well there’s not a single crypto
native company that has even applied for FDIC insurance yet.
There’s a reason for that. But that’s the fact. Actually there’s
one that has applied but the application was withdrawn. So now
all of us are starting from scratch to get FDIC insurance. It’s
a fascinating fact pattern because the incumbent banks already
have FDIC insurance. And I certainly hope that the intent wasn’t
to create a structural advantage for the incumbent banks because
all of these startups are now scrambling to get FDIC insurance.
And I can break a little news this morning. Last night of Ortiz
board voted for a monte to file for FDIC insurance. And we will
be dropping that FDIC insurance application very soon. But but
most of the crypto intermediaries are not structured to become
FDIC insured banks. They don’t have the capital. They don’t have
the they the compliance. They don’t have the management teams.
And very importantly they’re not ready to comply with the Bank
Holding Company Act which puts some pretty serious restrictions
on affiliates as well as on the cap tables. The banks for
example are not really allowed to have preferred stock in their
cap tables. And boy there’s a lot of venture capital money and a
lot of crypto intermediaries that don’t wouldn’t comply with a
bank holding company act.
Well I’m so thrilled because I love breaking news but Cuban I’m
curious that the fact that Monty has applied for FDIC FDIC
insurance is that in direct response to this this president’s
working group paper. Yes. And to be clear we haven’t dropped the
application yet. They have our business plan. We’ve been in
touch with them as as most of the crypto companies that are
seeking some form of bank charters have been in touch with them
and we look forward to working with them. The rules keep
changing and we’re going to figure out a way to get open. We
have no problem complying with all of these rules. We are the
closest among all the crypto intermediaries because we already
have that bank charter and we’re already in compliance with the
Bank Holding Company Act. The most important question though is
how fast this is all going to happen. And and Valente is going
to be a test case for that. We are. We are we’re scrambling to
get that application in as quickly as possible and look forward
to rolling up sleeves and determining whether whether the
innovators really will have the ability to compete with the
incumbents.
Well when you do drop that application I want you to tell me
first but Michael I want to bring you in here because on our
prep call we were talking about this race between sort of these
private tech companies and sort of these crypto native companies
and the government really to control this space. And Caitlin
mentioned that a lot of the crypto native companies haven’t
applied for FDIC insurance and that that could create an uneven
playing field. I’m curious to hear your thoughts on that and
who’s actually going to come out on top here.
I think the record is is a seminal event. It signals
the transformation of the industry from the offshore
unregistered
entrepreneurial organizations that have dominated it for the
first decade to the institutional institutionalised publicly
traded companies that are in the traditional industry.
It is a green light to the JP Morgan’s and the Bank of America
is on the Citigroup’s of the world to issue a trillion dollars
of stable coins. There’s one hundred and thirty billion dollars
of stable coins in the world right now. Right. They’re either
going to zero. If the regulators said you can’t have them or
they’re going to a trillion followed by 10 trillion. And I think
the administration knows this. And their vision is FDIC insured
banks properly managed with legal teams and general counsels and
compliance routines issuing billions and then hundreds of
billions and then trillions of dollars not for the use stable
coin use case right now is this subtle men of off shore
exchanges on Saturday afternoon trading crypto. But the real use
case is is Treasury remittance of Amazon and Apple and Google
and acts on cross-border or 8 billion absolute rule buying
things. And so if eight billion people are going to have digital
dollars in their wallets and if we’re going to move trillions
and tens of trillions of dollars of money around at the speed of
light you’re not going to do it without coming into the
regulatory environment which includes FDIC insurance compliance
and the like. So I think I think if you’re a small crypto
startup this is a bit scary. If you’re Jamie Diamond you were
waiting for this before you considered getting into this
business. And now the question is which of the big banks are
going to move first and which of the crypto native players are
going to cross the chasm to become institutional public grade.
And how many of developers will stay working for them if they
get acquired by big banks
like we got to grow up at some point. There’s a lot of Bitcoin
Maxis that don’t like the idea that publicly traded companies
own Bitcoin. But but that doesn’t stop me from buying three
billion dollars of it. And there’s a little friction between the
past and the future. And who’s going to who’s going to impact
this decentralized crypto economy.
Nick I want to hear your thoughts both on the paper and to
Michael’s point that I mean this could open the door to the big
banks the JP Morgan’s the Goldmans issuing a trillion dollars
worth of stable coins. I also want to hear your answer to that.
You know do you think that the crypto community would actually
use those stable coins this bank issues stable coins or who
would that be for.
Well the innovation historically in the stable coin space has
not come from the banks or the incumbent financial sector. It’s
come from startups and new crypto native firms. So I’m going to
push back a little bit here. I mean I found the paper to be
perturbing and I found that it didn’t
grant any recognition to the structures under which stable coins
are issued today
like the trust charter in New York or in Nevada or under the
money transmitter regime on the state by state basis. And you
know these structures work pretty well frankly. There’s
heterogeneity there. Right. But under some of those models you
have stable coin issuers as fiduciary is holding you know high
quality liquid assets. So the bank charter model which sort of
implies that the institution is engaging in maturity
transformation doesn’t seem to fully fit with what stable coins
are doing. It doesn’t really reflect the fact that they’re not
really engaging in long term lending. And so you know I would
push back a little bit and say I don’t believe stable coin
insurers need to be regulated as banks. That to me just seems to
invite a huge amount of government oversight.
And you know requiring FDIC insurance for stable point insurers
in my view doesn’t really comport with the fact that what
they’re doing is just holding high quality assets on a one to
one basis on kind of a full full reserve basis. And if you look
at the FDIC I mean that’s an instrument of government
intervention into the financial system. You know look at
historically look at Operation Choke Point. The FDIC was the
means through which political dictates were handed down. So you
know I find this to be ill fitting. And frankly I think you know
anti-competitive because it’s going to make it immensely
difficult for new startups to break and become stable coin
issuers. And it’s going to reward the largest financial
institutions.
Well Nick I’m curious to hear do you think that there should be
more stable coin issuers or would this structure this system
which you say works very well right now be better served by just
having one or two main ones. Because right now it feels like the
big boys are tether and circle and that seems to be what
everyone uses.
I mean it’s very dynamic. If you look at the market share
t’other had almost 100 percent market share and today they have
a much reduced market share. USD has been very successful. But
there’s other stable coins issued under some of these other
regimes which in my view are regulated. I mean people describe
stable currencies unregulated. That’s not the case. There’s
other stable points that have done very well and that are you
know pretty closely monitored by the relevant regulators whether
it’s DFS whether it’s you know individual states. And so it is
dynamic. And of course from you know a free market perspective I
think more issuers is always better than fewer. But the
president’s working groups
language here I think would restrict the state of issuers.
All right. Well we could talk easily for an hour about stable
coins but somehow we’re already halfway through our session
almost. I do want to say again to the audience if you have
questions feel free to submit them. But we have to talk about
ETF because last month history was made in the U.S.. You saw the
first Bitcoin futures backed ETF not physically backed funds
launch on U.S. exchanges. And that was to a lot of fanfare. I
mean the pressure is product accumulated over a billion assets
in about two days which is pretty remarkable. But Caitlin I want
to hear your thoughts on whether the fact that we do have U.S.
Bitcoin ETF now their futures backed again the caveat there. But
is that good or bad for the ecosystem overall.
Oh boy. It’s a double edged sword.
Ever since backed entered into the scene back in twenty
seventeen 2016 I’ve been warning that you know the leveraged
players coming into crypto we’re going to start applying the
same leverage games that the traditional financial industry
deploys. And when they do those leverage games they are creating
more paper claims to bitcoin than real on bitcoin exist. And for
owners of the real launching in bitcoin like MicroStrategy they
don’t care that the fact that the price gets kicked around.
We’ve had two flash crashes just since the ETF were introduced
in bitcoin. The pricing is going to get kicked around
periodically and probably suppressed because real demand is
being satisfied by fake supply paper paper supply. Ben that does
all things equal. When any time you increase the supply of
something and you hold your demand constant your price is going
to drop. That’s that’s exactly what’s happening. Bitcoin is now
let a lower price than it otherwise would be were it not for all
these leverage games. But I will also say that those warnings
that I that I had back in 2016 were were
about the leverage games that were going to be played. What I
missed back then was that it wasn’t the Wall Street firms that
it was gonna be our own industry that was going to bring those
leverage games. And so the ETF just ratcheted up by a lot. But
they’re but the leverage games this is one of the biggest trends
of this four year Bob Bull cycle is there’s so much leverage in
it. And the impact of that is is going to be fascinating. We
don’t really know how it’s going to play out.
Like going through a serious response here given that
MicroStrategy is a significant holder of unchained Bitcoin. I
mean what’s your opinion on these futures back products. First
of all I’m not concerned that a spot ETF is going to re
hypothecated or lend their bitcoin out. I think that that’s
going to be governed. So that’s not a concern of mine. I think
that the destiny of bitcoin is first it’s eating gold as fast as
it can. And so it’s going to it’s going to grow to replace all
gold ETF in the next 2 3 years. And ultimately it’s going to
emerge as the primary asset index for the Western world which
means it’s going to replace the role of the spider s p y. The
S&P index. And to do that you need to spot ETF S and once they
spot ETF role I think you’ll see billions and tens of billions
and hundreds of billions then trillions of dollars flow into
them and the ETF will just hold the underlying bitcoin as a
custodian and serve as an important institutional on ramp for
institutional investors that want that monetary index DAX
exposure.
Michael you said spot bitcoin ETF a few times there. I mean what
is the futures backed products that we are getting now. Are they
not the key to that.
Yeah I think they’re I mean they’re inferior offerings to a spot
and X but
they’re the best that institutional investors can get right now.
But clearly the right answer is let investors buy a trillion
dollars worth of Bitcoin via an ETF because the ETF plug in to
the existing security structure the existing prime brokerages
the existing collateral packages etc. So I think it’s if you’re
looking for an institutional catalyst. Clearly the availability
of a broad range of ETF is especially spot ETF. They’re trusted
and trusted. Like if I if I bought a billion dollars of this
stuff and then the person running ETF could read hypothecated 14
times that’s not trusted. I don’t think that’s gonna happen. I
don’t think that’s gonna be allowed. So if I have a trusted
perfected spot ETF I think it’s going to grow rapidly and it’s
going to serve a purpose as the basic monetary index of the
Western world.
NIKKEI what’s your opinion on that. I mean in thinking about
institutions in particular how big of a catalyst is the fact
that we finally have Bitcoin ETF in the US.
Paul Unfortunately the futures ETF is inferior and if we’ve got
a spot ETF I think we’d be the hottest commodity ETF launch of
all time attracting probably well over a hundred billion in
assets within a month or so.
But the current ETF we have right now is a shadow of that and I
believe it’s a political restriction which is limiting the
market’s ability to create this product that everybody wants and
this functional spot ETF and other countries that work just
great.
And there’s no explanation for the reticence at the top levels
here to approve this product which obviously should exist and
would make life immensely easier for all types of different
investors.
Wolf I asked you to explain that reticence among U.S. regulators
which I’m going to do right now. What’s your best guess for why
they approved a futures backed ETF over spot ETF. And I mean
what is the drawback. Because I feel like we’ve danced around
why you know the community really believes that a spot ETF would
be better.
Well because there’s just as you know and you’ve reported on
this very well there’s a significant cost 10 plus percentage
points associated with rolling a futures based product which
increases a lot of tracking error.
The stated justification is that the CMC is regulated
by the CFTC I suppose. But there’s plenty of other commodities
that have markets which are spot markets and globally traded.
And you know the you know the S.E.C. doesn’t really have a
problem with approving to ask for those that are a problem with
approving forex inverse natural gas ETF either. So a lot of
these complaints about investor protection ring completely
hollow to me. And I think ultimately the motive is just simply
suppressing the growth of a bitcoin.
Mm hmm. Yeah. Yeah I definitely have reported a lot about
contango in the last couple of weeks. And Michael I want to turn
back to you because you know a lot of people made the point that
it’s easier to just buy physical bitcoin and that’s something
that MicroStrategy has been doing for several years now. But I
was looking at your holdings and it did jump out to me that
since the mid half of this year you know micro strategies
purchases of bitcoin have cooled down in terms of the pace. And
I’m curious why that is.
Well we’ve acquired at least five hundred million dollars worth
of Bitcoin a quarter ago about 420 million this quarter. The
price of Bitcoin is going up. I mean we bought along at ten
thousand dollars a coin. It was a bit easier than so. Buying it
at fifty thousand dollars a coin slows you down. We’re going to
continue to acquire it.
Look I think with regard to that these ETF in the regulation
there’s a rate at which the regulators can evolve and they’re
going at a responsible prudent fashion in their view. And if
you’re an investor when they finally solve all these issues it’s
going to be a. I think it’s a thousand times easier to buy the
spot ETF than it is to buy. Bitcoin is property and institution
would take six months to a year to go through all the regulatory
compliance due diligence checks to actually figure out how to
acquire and hold and custody the property. And if it doesn’t fit
into their architecture. So when when that problem gets solved
the demand is going to go through the roof. The the motive to
sell it is is going to disappear. The price is going to shoot
up. Right. So you either do the work now and get a lower price
or you wait until it’s super easy and you pay a higher price and
everybody gets to make that choice. I kind of like the fact that
it’s hard to buy the property right now and the accounting is
obtuse and they spot ETF is not there. As I said tongue in cheek
with regard to the FDIC the FDIC chair was considering letting
banks put it on their balance sheet when they finally work that
out. Everybody all want it. Nobody else saw it. You won’t be
able to afford it.
That’s interesting. Yeah. There is sort of an exclusivity there.
But I want to stick with regulation and go to you Caitlin
because you’re based in Wyoming. And it’s interesting that
Wyoming has become this sort of crypto hotspot especially as you
know the broader federal government sort of tries to work out
how it actually feels about crypto. Wyoming obviously very
crypto friendly. Curious to hear first. Well why that is. Why
Wyoming and what other states do you think might be taking a
page from Wyoming’s book.
Well it was opportunistic and it in fact actually we’re seeing a
repeat with all of these new banking rules that are coming down.
We’re seeing a repeat of what happened four years ago where
suddenly a lot of crypto startups lost their bank accounts. I
think it’s pretty clear in fact actually the FCC chair yesterday
made an incredible speech that everyone with any interest in
fintech needs to read where he essentially said not only are we
bringing crypto into the perimeter but we are also bringing bank
as a service and rent to charter arrangements into the
perimeter. Translation get ready because a lot of thin texts are
going to be losing their bank. U.S. dollar banking access. He
all but said that yesterday and and and Wyoming got started back
in 2017 in part because there was so much banking of the
startups of crypto back then. And ultimately Wyoming was trying
to solve a problem for the industry. And it started because
Wyoming actually had an outlier money transmission statute that
needed to get fixed. And thank goodness it did. And then the
legislators saw an opportunity to welcome an industry by just
simply giving it legal status. It’s pretty simple what Wyoming
did. We just said hey bitcoin is property and we defined it
under commercial law and created a roadmap for judges and
parties to transactions to know exactly what their rights and
obligations are under the law making it backwards compatible
with the legal system. And in fact actually a very important
event is about to take place later this week which is the
Uniform Law Commission in the United States which recommends
laws to the states. The states are actually the primary
governmental unit in the United States. A lot of folks lose
sight of that is not the federal government but especially with
commercial. A lot of states control that. And there is an effort
to actually take the concept of what Wyoming did and make it
broad. You ask the question who’s followed Wyoming. A handful of
states have early adopted that Uniform Law Commission proposal
Texas Arkansas and Nebraska so far. And and what I would
recommend to other states is early adopt that proposal if you
don’t. The plaintiffs lawyers are coming and your court system
is going to get all tied up gummed up with with litigation over
this because there’s so much money in this industry now. And the
right thing to do is just define what the legal status is. And
that’s what brought Wyoming to the table. And then the industry
flocked here because simply there was a definition of legal
status.
Man the American West leading the way. I love it. But somehow we
only have about three minutes left. We do have a question from
the audience that I want to show you to all of you. And that
question is what major catalyst in your opinion will take the
crypto acid industry to its next level of maturity and adoption.
So we’re gonna do another rapid fire. Nick I’m going to shoot
that question to you first. What’s the next major catalyst.
If I had to guess a major central bank acquiring Bitcoin on a
par with its gold reserves looking at the share of gold it owns
and acquiring that proportional amount of bitcoin in order to
hedge the monetary transition that’s coming here.
Any guesses on what central bank that could be.
I would look towards the ones that are divesting themselves from
dollar assets and buying gold and indicating an openness to
alternative monetary regimes which is many of them.
I would look towards the ones with sovereign wealth funds with
mineral funds look to the ones that can easily turn energy into
money through bitcoin mining.
All right. Fair enough Michael. Same question. Next major
catalyst.
I mean the major catalyst would be a spot ETF for Bitcoin. Fair
value accounting for four bitcoins and FDIC guidance to allow a
bank to hold bitcoin without a 100 percent reserve ratio.
When do you think we could see a spot ETF approved in the US.
I can’t speculate. I just think those are the kind of trade.
Yeah OK. OK fair point. Caitlin. Same question. Next a major
catalyst that’s gonna take the crypto industry to the next
level. I would say it doesn’t need one but two to respond to
what Michael just said. It’s so interesting though that
regarding the FDIC and allowing banks to hold bitcoin on balance
sheet all boy that’s putting some serious risk if that does
indeed happen right at the core of the financial system is
fascinating to me that it used to be that you tried to keep risk
out of the FDIC. And now the discussion is to bring all this
risk into the FDIC and have levered banks holding Bitcoin. It
goes back to the early proposal or early observations about
Bitcoin potentially being an apex predator in the financial
system. So I would hope everyone’s cautious about that. But back
to your question there. I don’t think Bitcoin needs a catalyst.
And to me price is at least interesting aspect of it. All we
care about is that it keeps on truckin. And I’m very interested
in the tap root upgrade that’s coming for bitcoin very soon.
Just hardening that technology. All we care about is that it
just keeps adding blocks and all of these market structure and
bank and an ETF discussions all have to do with price. But at
the end of the day as long as the core bitcoin block chain is
still adding blocks then bitcoin is just fine.
All right. We’re going to leave it there. Great discussion guys.
Thank you so much. Michael Nick and Kaitlin great to talk with
you today. Really appreciate your time. That was just the first
panel of the Bloomberg Innovation Summit. We have a great day
coming up so please stay tuned. And thank you to everyone who
took the time to watch today.
Luc Bloom
September 15, 2021 at 6:22 pm
This effect is quite ugly and unnecessary.
youlittlerocket
September 15, 2021 at 6:25 pm
District 9 sequel please ????
Finkel - Funk
September 15, 2021 at 6:27 pm
Subscribers of LinusTechTips could have seen this video three weeks earlier!
uncertainty principle
September 15, 2021 at 6:37 pm
Should have staiyed a poc….looks fugly
Tarek Karkash
September 15, 2021 at 6:38 pm
It’s not a bad film, It’s just a man limited by the technology of his time.
Pedro Henrique Barros
September 15, 2021 at 6:40 pm
And one question still remains unanswered: Why?
Harsh Parmar
September 15, 2021 at 7:23 pm
because why not and it might give direction to some new techniques
kinomi????
September 15, 2021 at 7:44 pm
AISURU.TOKYO/mizumi/?[????]
(◍•ᴗ•◍)✧*。18 year and over
Youtube: This is fime
Someone: Says “heck”
Youtube: Be gone
#однако #я #люблю #таких #рыбаков #Интересно #забавно #девушка #смешная #垃圾
Anym
September 15, 2021 at 8:19 pm
why not? someone needs to be the first to try it
JeremySpeaks
September 15, 2021 at 11:51 pm
Did you finish the video at all? The possibility of not just watching a film but interacting with the characters (maybe even becoming one of the characters), walking into a set like in VR, immersive movies, there’s a future there.
HEITAROSS gmg
September 15, 2021 at 7:08 pm
if this will lead to real open world vr gaming then you have my support ????
Victor Creed
September 15, 2021 at 7:11 pm
He was on vacation and happened to be filming a movie while he was there, just like Adam Sandler.
Josh Starks
September 15, 2021 at 7:21 pm
That’s a shame because the movie is hot garbage.
David
September 15, 2021 at 7:25 pm
this sounds like a postproduction nightmare
Abell Seyfu
September 15, 2021 at 7:35 pm
Narrative of Self is the result of a feedback loop between “Separate Self” & Cosmos ????
Tonya Richards
September 15, 2021 at 9:04 pm
Gibberish
Projekt Brainstorm
September 15, 2021 at 7:41 pm
At 3:34, are those IDE hard drives?
Dustin Hall
September 15, 2021 at 7:44 pm
Watching this film, without being able to pause the scene and move around within it, then was all this effort just for vibe?
BattleModeBainbridge
September 15, 2021 at 9:37 pm
Yes and it was worth it 😛
JeremySpeaks
September 15, 2021 at 11:44 pm
But that data exists and future release can make it so that the film can be made interactive as he says towards the end of the video
voice of peace
September 15, 2021 at 8:21 pm
*I invite everyone for quran recitation thank you* ❤❤????????????????????❤❤????????ف
i p
September 15, 2021 at 8:34 pm
I had this idea a year ago. Happy to see it realied
u2blr
September 15, 2021 at 8:56 pm
Unnecessary technology. Motion capture can do most of those jobs.
YOSSMAN
September 15, 2021 at 9:03 pm
making a model of her and then just using motion capture wopuld have achived the same effect? especially as the rendered image is displayed in 2d anyways and the audience has no possibility to change the angle or move around. Then just using cameras within unity to frame the shot…
J&H
September 15, 2021 at 10:50 pm
The new Unreal Engine would have been even better.
Miquelangelo Pomeroy Coquille Mirador Rex
September 15, 2021 at 9:15 pm
Garbage waste of technology. No talent production.
J T
September 15, 2021 at 9:43 pm
That poor actor..
EL NOODLE
September 15, 2021 at 10:13 pm
Yeah okay… Your movies were pretty trash and the rating on this one is a 4.3 That’s beyond low. 5.5 is okay to good. Let that sink in.
BobEckert56
September 15, 2021 at 11:05 pm
Just what we need in this time, a horror film with a little bit of science fiction, to help us sleep even less at night. What is the matter with these people?
tajma hall
September 15, 2021 at 11:20 pm
This is so cool I hope other filmmakers use this technique
j b
September 16, 2021 at 12:37 am
This movie is a crap.
blendwerk tv
September 16, 2021 at 1:04 am
This is how I did this low budget video :
S.
September 16, 2021 at 1:32 am
Badly.
Pixel
September 16, 2021 at 1:34 am
this was really terribly executed; and this guy is just attempting to ride of VR hype with mediocre content
Matthew Gumabon
September 16, 2021 at 4:23 am
Funny how life and art are always imitating each other.
High-production video games have been aiming to mimic the visuals of real life to imitate the look and feel of traditional cinematic movies.
Now movies like this are aiming to imitate the look and feel of video games.
Caffeinated Nation
September 16, 2021 at 6:07 am
I don’t envy the editing team.
Da Island Gamer
September 16, 2021 at 7:17 am
Wow this is absolutely amazing. The why we keep advancing technology is amazing beautiful and scary.
Bucatti
September 16, 2021 at 7:26 am
The movie was so bad my goodness!
V A
September 16, 2021 at 8:31 am
This is trash ????????
-
September 16, 2021 at 8:56 am
I know this is a very random question but I have a question aimed specifically at Americans. Does the guy in this video and the actor Bradley Cooper have the same regional accent?
Mary Rose Kent
September 17, 2021 at 1:59 pm
Not to my American ears. Bradley Cooper has a tiny little lilt in his voice, whereas this man’s inflections are clipped.
Semut Pink
September 16, 2021 at 10:03 am
insane !!!
Jeroen
September 16, 2021 at 10:05 am
Okay no.
Allen Wadenholm
September 16, 2021 at 10:06 am
I thought The Mandalorian and Unreal Engine were pushing the boundaries of virtual production but this is just an entirely new level of virtual.
Ron Dgasz
September 16, 2021 at 10:15 am
I’m not sure where this is coming forem but this is really inspiring me to go do something cool
Mary Rose Kent
September 17, 2021 at 1:55 pm
Go for it, dude!
Chris Adels
September 16, 2021 at 10:25 am
don’t worry, we fix this in post
Jaron Goh
September 16, 2021 at 10:41 am
This was just absolutely fascinating! I really liked the way how Neill talked us through the process and intricacies of filming in this format. Amazing kudos to the actress (sorry, I forget her name!) who had to act her scenes surrounded by cameras with minimal aides and reference points!
Bibi
September 22, 2021 at 12:14 am
Z
Bibi
September 22, 2021 at 12:14 am
Šttdrz
Bibi
September 22, 2021 at 12:14 am
T
Bibi
September 22, 2021 at 12:14 am
Zs
Alexander Crowell
September 16, 2021 at 1:57 pm
Chappie 2 please
Dursun Sahin
September 16, 2021 at 1:59 pm
this is mind-blowing ????
i grew up with 8bit graphics and 2 bit sound… and now this !
Arthur Oatley
September 16, 2021 at 4:36 pm
I thought Blomkamp was Afrikaaner, why does he speak with an American accent?
Mary Rose Kent
September 17, 2021 at 1:54 pm
That would explain a couple of pronunciations that sounded strange to my [American] ears.
Arthur Oatley
September 17, 2021 at 11:27 pm
You can definitely hear a tiny bit of Afrikaans accent here and there, but he’s definitely affecting an American accent.
I’m just wondering why, it’s not like he’s an actor that has to be able to pass as an American in front of the camera.
Ignacio Ramirez
September 16, 2021 at 5:44 pm
but… WHY
Mary Rose Kent
September 17, 2021 at 1:52 pm
just… BECAUSE
Shtwaan E.
September 16, 2021 at 6:25 pm
Meh, now in 3D.
John Cusick
September 16, 2021 at 6:45 pm
Looks like a game with bad graphics
Zubair Ismail
September 17, 2021 at 11:55 am
That was the point though
John Cusick
September 17, 2021 at 2:20 pm
@Zubair Ismail well, make a game not a movie then…
E Forrest
September 16, 2021 at 8:55 pm
I like how in reference to Unity you cited 3 of the least-graphicly taxing games possible XD
judy ann romena
September 16, 2021 at 11:30 pm
Wow
Lets Read!
September 17, 2021 at 1:42 am
This guy seems wicked shmart
krishna murli
September 17, 2021 at 7:07 am
,
ChrisCrond
September 17, 2021 at 1:50 am
I like how he has to convince people about why the graphics look “cheap”. People just don’t seem to understand anything anymore
3DaveP
September 17, 2021 at 5:22 am
He could have just walked around with a Kinect 2 and shot his movie
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TxxT
September 17, 2021 at 3:28 pm
Too bad the movie sucked
DoJo Mast3r
September 17, 2021 at 8:38 pm
Too bad the movie sucked
Woeffi
September 17, 2021 at 9:20 pm
too bad the movie sucks lol
BOOMDIGIDYable
September 17, 2021 at 9:25 pm
Too bad the movie sucks.
olajide paris
September 18, 2021 at 12:53 am
A lot of innovation for such a mediocre story and film.
Dwayne La Rose
September 18, 2021 at 2:51 pm
Wow this is really interesting. Looks amazing but WHERE IS THE DISTRICT 9 SEQUEL!?!?!
Sweet Toother
September 20, 2021 at 12:14 am
Very cool.
FB: Leejandro Alphonse
September 20, 2021 at 4:44 am
Neill blomkamp never fails to impress my goodness this is of the best horror I have seen this 2021
L.A. Mateo
September 20, 2021 at 4:44 am
Neill blomkamp never fails to impress my goodness this is of the best horror I have seen this 2021
Shannon T
September 20, 2021 at 7:47 pm
I’m still confused exactly what this film is or how we view it
Kyra Lavoie
September 21, 2021 at 11:14 am
This would be a rendering nightmarrrrreeeeee. I could barely even render a small 3D scene without it taking 12 hours. …. This would take… foooorever
Jacob Carlson
September 22, 2021 at 12:53 am
I love this SO much
Sal
September 23, 2021 at 9:13 am
The film bombed so hard
Alin Cristian Militaru
September 23, 2021 at 7:54 pm
i love photogrammetry. i love to do some models, but this guy 🙂 he crazy about photogrammetry 🙂