Founded Year

2018

Stage

Incubator/Accelerator | Alive

Mosaic Score
The Mosaic Score is an algorithm that measures the overall financial health and market potential of private companies.

-20 points in the past 30 days

About Flawless AI

Flawless AI focuses on AI-powered filmmaking tools in the entertainment industry. The company offers products like DeepEditor and TrueSync that refine dialogue and dub films into multiple languages. Flawless AI serves the film and advertising sectors with post-production solutions. It was founded in 2018 and is based in London, England.

Headquarters Location

London, England,

United Kingdom

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Research containing Flawless AI

Get data-driven expert analysis from the CB Insights Intelligence Unit.

CB Insights Intelligence Analysts have mentioned Flawless AI in 1 CB Insights research brief, most recently on Apr 2, 2024.

Expert Collections containing Flawless AI

Expert Collections are analyst-curated lists that highlight the companies you need to know in the most important technology spaces.

Flawless AI is included in 6 Expert Collections, including Artificial Intelligence.

A

Artificial Intelligence

12,626 items

Companies developing artificial intelligence solutions, including cross-industry applications, industry-specific products, and AI infrastructure solutions.

D

Digital Content & Synthetic Media

2,287 items

The Synthetic Media collection includes companies that use artificial intelligence to generate, edit, or enable digital content under all forms, including images, videos, audio, and text, among others.

A

AI 100 (All Winners 2018-2025)

200 items

G

Generative AI 50

50 items

CB Insights' list of the 50 most promising private generative AI companies across the globe.

G

Generative AI

2,807 items

Companies working on generative AI applications and infrastructure.

A

AI 100 (2024)

100 items

Latest Flawless AI News

Could AI Kill Off Hollywood’s Talent Pipeline?

Jul 29, 2025

(Christopher Smith for TheWrap) As writer Van Robichaux puts it, he only has an agent because an assistant read one of his scripts, liked it and flagged the right person. That assistant went on to become a producer on the Oscar-nominated “The Brutalist.” He got his start, like many executives in Hollywood, reviewing scripts and passing them to higher-level decision makers, according to Robichaux, who declined to name the person. But as the presence of artificial intelligence expands throughout the industry, low-level jobs like a script reader will be among the first to disappear. “Would his job even exist if they didn’t need assistants reading all the screenplays coming over the transom?” Robichaux said in an AI roundtable hosted by WrapPRO last week. “If his job doesn’t exist, does he not become a producer and does ‘The Brutalist’ not get made? “Worst of all, would I have a career?” The hypothetical question posed by Robichaux, who has written episodes of “Brooklyn Nine-Nine” and is writing the “Wedding Crashers” sequel, has a firm basis in reality, with AI promising to handle a lot of the lower-level grunt work for everyone. It’s happening faster than you think, with Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei telling Axios that he expects the technology to wipe out half of all entry-level white collar jobs over the next one to five years (although he wouldn’t be the first tech executive to make overly aggressive predictions). But what’s less discussed is the consequence of losing some or even all of those entry-level jobs, whose real value lies in bringing in young talent and educating them about the business from the ground up. That kind of institutional knowledge is invaluable in a field as complicated and politically fraught as entertainment, and the industry risks losing what is essentially a training ground for the next-generation of decision makers. “It does create a pipeline problem,” Robichaux said. “Every single major Hollywood producer started with a low-level industry job that is going away.” What is lost In India, thousands of people grow up aspiring to work for consumer goods giant Unilever. Once hired, the company sends that new hire to a rural community to sell soap, according to Arun Chandrasekaran, an analyst at research firm Gartner. That’s because the company wants the employee to understand how consumers buy their products and how price sensitivity actually works in the real world. It’s a practical example of the kind of institutional knowledge a person gains when doing entry-level work as they work their way up the ranks of their field, and isn’t different from the kind of skills, hacks and short-hand communication you pick up on the set of a film or show. Read Next But what happens to that experience when AI starts to replace these positions? There’s the risk that short-term gain in reduced costs may come at the expense of talent with the necessary critical thinking skills to lead down the line. “We would lose some of that lower-level tacit knowledge, which is important for higher-level decisions,” Chandrasekaran said. Talent agencies, for instance, start trainees in the mailroom, having them progress as assistants handling administrative tasks before eventually getting the chance to become an agent. Likewise, script readers and assistants get a chance to absorb nuances of the entertainment business, learning what works and what doesn’t work with audiences as they end up being the producers or writers of the next generation. Losing those positions means one of the more realistic entrances into entertainment is shut off. Getting into Hollywood is already difficult, oftentimes reliant more on who you know vs. what you can do. With fewer opportunities up for grabs, it could just get worse. “AI could accelerate the existing dynamics,” said Brian Justie, a senior research analyst at the UCLA Labor Center. Read Next It’s already happening in tech Hollywood has been relatively conservative when it comes to adopting AI, so you can look to the more aggressive tech industry as a bellwether for the impact of the technology. It’s nothing short of brutal. The total tally of layoffs in the tech industry has exceeded 100,000 this year, according to a count conducted by The Bridge Chronicle . That’s been led by big cuts from Microsoft, Meta, Intel and others. Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella in April said up to 30% of his company’s code is now written by AI; over the next three months, his company laid off 15,000 employees . Google was willing to spend $2.4 billion to hire a CEO and a few engineers because their AI expertise was specifically focused on programming to replace coders. Last month, Amazon CEO Andy Jassy told employees, “In the next few years, we expect that this will reduce our total corporate workforce as we get efficiency gains from using AI extensively across the company.” While the entertainment industry may not follow tech’s playbook to a tee, it’s not a stretch to see the allure of cutting costs inspiring similar moves. Advancements in AI capabilities around VFX could potentially see layoffs in that area alone. Entry-level 2.0? Not everyone thinks the end of grunt work for a new hire spells doom for the industry. Scott Mann, founder and co-CEO of Flawless AI, a post-production visual effects company, said AI could potentially change what an entry-level position looks like. Traditionally, it’s incredibly difficult to jump into a position where you’re directing or writing a film. But AI tools will eventually make it easier to craft films from the get go, said Mann, who was also on the WrapPRO AI roundtable. You’re already seeing it with creators, with tools provided by the likes of YouTube and TikTok enabling more polished videos. WrapPro’s “AI in Hollywood: A Creative Turning Point” panel (TheWrap/YouTube) “It’s scary because it’s not what we know,” he said. “But it changes what ‘entry-level’ could look like.” Hannah Elsakr, vice president of global GenAI new business ventures at Adobe, echoed the sentiment, noting that new hires may enter at a different level without the grunt work. She added that it’s happening with coders, and that the more sophisticated work required, whether it’s creative or coding, may help companies identify the “real gems” earlier, allowing them to advance faster. It’s also unclear if AI will actually replace all of these tasks. While the technology has made huge leaps over the last three years, there remain limitations, particularly on the creative side. Justie warned that AI won’t have the same impact across all jobs. It’s clear there’s a shift happening with increasing comfort in relying on AI and bots to handle tasks for us. But what happens if that institutional knowledge built up over experience and grunt work goes away? “The risk is we become so dependent on AI, when we have a catastrophic element that AI doesn’t foresee, we can’t make decisions,” Chandrasekaran said. And if Hollywood is anything, it’s unpredictable and, at times, even catastrophic. Read Next

Flawless AI Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)

  • When was Flawless AI founded?

    Flawless AI was founded in 2018.

  • Where is Flawless AI's headquarters?

    Flawless AI's headquarters is located at London.

  • What is Flawless AI's latest funding round?

    Flawless AI's latest funding round is Incubator/Accelerator.

  • Who are the investors of Flawless AI?

    Investors of Flawless AI include AWS Generative AI Accelerator.

  • Who are Flawless AI's competitors?

    Competitors of Flawless AI include Dubdub.ai, Beyond Presence, Hudson AI, Dubme, Tavus and 7 more.

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Compare Flawless AI to Competitors

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dubpro.ai

Dubpro.ai provides AI-powered video dubbing for content localization across various industries. The company offers services that include translation, voice personas in different languages, and syncing of dubbed audio to video. Dubpro.ai serves the education sector, assisting content creators with video localization. dubpro.ai was formerly known as Deepsync. It was founded in 2019 and is based in Noida, India.

Deepdub Logo
Deepdub

Deepdub is a company specializing in AI-powered dubbing and localization solutions for audiovisual content across various sectors. The company offers services such as emotion-based text-to-speech, speech-to-speech translation, and voice cloning to create authentic and human-like audio experiences for a global audience. Deepdub primarily serves the media and entertainment industry, corporate sectors, and eLearning platforms, providing them with tools to localize content efficiently and effectively. It was founded in 2019 and is based in Tel Aviv, Israel.

Voiseed Logo
Voiseed

Voiseed specializes in the development of expressive AI voices within the speech synthesis technology sector. The company offers a cloud-based solution that enables the creation of lifelike audio experiences with human emotions and prosody, as well as a platform for multilingual voice content that includes customizable voice modulation and pronunciation control. Voiseed primarily serves the videogame industry and the media and entertainment sector with its advanced voice-over and localization services. It was founded in 2020 and is based in Milano, Italy.

Dubme Logo
Dubme

Dubme specializes in AI-powered dubbing solutions within the media and entertainment industries. It offers dubbing services that leverage artificial intelligence for voice cloning, lip synchronization, and accent control, aimed at enhancing the accessibility and impact of audiovisual content. Its solutions cater to various sectors, including media and entertainment, corporate environments, content creators, the gaming industry, and e-learning platforms. It was founded in 2023 and is based in Madrid, Spain.

Tavus Logo
Tavus

Tavus is a company focused on human-AI interaction, working on a modular operating system for AI in the video communication sector. Their offerings include a Conversational Video Interface that allows AI agents to engage in real-time conversations, as well as foundational models that equip AI with rendering, perception, and turn-detection capabilities. Tavus serves sectors that require scalable AI interactions, including healthcare, education, and recruitment. It was founded in 2020 and is based in Houston, Texas.

Dubverse Logo
Dubverse

Dubverse specializes in AI-powered video dubbing and localization services within the content creation industry. The company offers a suite of tools for multilingual video dubbing, subtitle generation, text-to-speech conversion, and transcription services, designed to make content accessible and engaging for a global audience. Dubverse primarily serves sectors such as education, media, technology, and news organizations seeking to expand their reach across language barriers. It was founded in 2021 and is based in Gurugram, India.

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