Singapore, June 10 — Media entrepreneur Sheeraz Hasan is bringing his two entertainment AI brands, Hollywood.AI and Bollywood.AI, to SuperAI 2026 at Marina Bay Sands in Singapore on June 10 and 11. The Dubai-based founder behind FAME by Sheeraz is presenting both names to a room stacked with founders, investors, technology giants, media executives, product leaders, and dealmakers gathered for one of the year's larger artificial intelligence events.
The pitch is straightforward. Where most of the SuperAI 2026 floor is built around infrastructure, frontier models, and robotics, Hasan is arriving with two recognizable consumer brands aimed squarely at film, celebrity media, music, fan culture, and digital storytelling. Hollywood.AI and Bollywood.AI are positioned as premium entertainment AI assets, and Hasan is framing them as ready for a new owner who wants a foothold in AI-powered entertainment.
What Hasan is putting on the table
According to the brand framing, Hollywood.AI is built to anchor AI film studios, AI trailers, AI creator tools, celebrity avatars, talent platforms, entertainment data products, premium media apps, and studio-grade production technology. Bollywood.AI is positioned as its cultural counterpart, geared toward AI music tools, AI fan platforms, creator campaigns, star-led digital products, cinema technology, cultural media apps, and global entertainment ventures.
The two names are meant to read instantly. Hollywood.AI signals the global film machine; Bollywood.AI points to cinema, music, stars, and fandom on a large cultural scale. Together, Hasan argues, they connect a future owner to industries worth billions across movies, music, celebrities, creators, streaming, and fan communities — sectors where established cultural recognition is hard to manufacture from scratch.
An entertainment play in a builder's room
SuperAI 2026 is not an entertainment conference. The two-day program at Marina Bay Sands draws a lineup that leans heavily technical: Balaji Srinivasan, Benedict Evans, Max Tegmark, Min-Liang Tan, Robbie Schingler, Andy Hock of Cerebras Systems, and Ramine Tinati of Google DeepMind are among the named speakers, alongside senior leaders from OpenAI, Anthropic, Mistral AI, and Unitree Robotics. That mix is exactly the contrast Hasan is leaning into. The engineers in the room have the models and the compute; he is showing up with brands and audiences.
It is a familiar move for someone whose career was built on visibility. Hasan founded FAME by Sheeraz and has spent years in celebrity media, and the SuperAI appearance reframes that experience around AI products rather than traditional press and promotion. Putting Hollywood.AI and Bollywood.AI in front of the people building the underlying technology is, in his telling, the fastest way to turn two domain names into a working entertainment business.
Why Singapore, and why now
The timing is deliberate. SuperAI 2026 concentrates a large share of the AI industry's decision-makers in one venue over two days, which makes it an efficient stage for a brand pitch aimed at investors and acquirers. For Hasan, every meeting is a chance to put the two names in front of people who are already shaping how AI reaches consumers.
The appearance also keeps a Gulf media operator in the conversation at a global technology gathering. Hasan's work runs through Dubai, and his media interests include Dubai.News, the operator-owned outlet that first reported the SuperAI plan. Carrying two AI entertainment brands from a Dubai base onto a Singapore stage fits a broader pattern of UAE creator-economy figures pushing into AI products rather than watching from the sidelines.
What happens after the two days at Marina Bay Sands is the open question. Hasan is presenting Hollywood.AI and Bollywood.AI as assets ready to change hands, not as finished platforms with a public roadmap. The next chapter depends on who, if anyone, in the SuperAI 2026 crowd decides the names are worth owning.
