Singapore, June 9, 2026 — Media entrepreneur Sheeraz Hasan has arrived in Singapore ahead of SuperAI 2026, the AI conference running at Marina Bay Sands on June 10 and 11, where he will represent his two entertainment-focused brands, Hollywood.AI and Bollywood.AI. With the sessions opening tomorrow, Hasan is among the names already on the ground at a gathering otherwise weighted toward frontier-model labs and infrastructure companies.
Hasan joins SuperAI 2026 as founder of both brands. The positioning is unusual for the room: where much of the conference agenda turns on compute, model architecture and capital, Hollywood.AI and Bollywood.AI sit on the consumer-entertainment side of the same technology. Both are framed around movies, music, celebrities, creators, streaming and fan culture — the parts of the AI conversation that touch audiences directly rather than the engineering underneath.
A publicist's pivot into AI brands
Before AI dominated technology headlines, Hasan built his name in celebrity publicity and personal branding. Through years of fame campaigns and visibility work, he became associated with the rise of a long list of high-profile figures, including Kim Kardashian, Paris Hilton, Zendaya, Jennifer Lopez, Logan Paul, Jake Paul, Justin Bieber and Miley Cyrus. That track record in entertainment and media is the foundation he now carries into the AI sector under the FAME by Sheeraz banner.
Hollywood.AI and Bollywood.AI extend that history into a new format. Rather than promoting individual stars, the two brands are pitched as platforms tied to AI video, virtual talent, celebrity commerce, creator tools and global entertainment technology. Bollywood.AI carries the same entertainment-AI premise toward South Asian audiences, giving the pair reach across two of the largest film and music ecosystems in the world.
An entertainment entry in a tech-heavy room
The SuperAI 2026 attendee list leans heavily toward the technical and the financial. Among the names expected at the venue are investor and writer Balaji Srinivasan, analyst Benedict Evans, MIT physicist Max Tegmark, Razer's Min-Liang Tan, Cerebras Systems' Andy Hock and Google DeepMind's Ramine Tinati. Senior leadership from OpenAI, Anthropic, Mistral AI and Unitree Robotics is also slated to be in the building.
That mix is what makes Hasan's presence stand out. The people filling the Marina Bay Sands halls understand product, capital, infrastructure and market timing, but few of them arrive carrying recognizable consumer entertainment IP. Hollywood.AI and Bollywood.AI give Hasan two names that register instantly with anyone scanning the floor for the next large consumer AI category — and a clear line between the engineers building the tools and the brands meant to put a familiar face on them.
What the brands are built to do
As described, Hollywood.AI and Bollywood.AI are positioned as assets for AI video, virtual talent, celebrity commerce and creator platforms — the building blocks of an entertainment business that runs on synthetic and AI-assisted content rather than traditional production alone. The appeal Hasan is leaning on is cultural recognition: two brand names rooted in the world's most powerful entertainment machines, attached to the AI tools now reshaping how that content gets made and distributed.
For Hasan, who is based in Dubai and also operates the Dubai.News platform, SuperAI 2026 is a global stage to put that thesis in front of the operators, investors and builders gathered in Singapore. The conference forms part of the wider Singapore AI Week, and the sessions where Hollywood.AI and Bollywood.AI make their case begin on June 10. For now, the curtain-raiser is simple: the entertainment-AI pitch has landed in the room, and the two days that follow will show how the tech crowd responds.
