SuperAI 2026 has filled Marina Bay Sands in Singapore with the heaviest hitters in artificial intelligence, and two entertainment brands are getting the loudest buzz. Hollywood.AI and Bollywood.AI, both founded by Sheeraz Hasan, arrived with a pitch aimed straight at the tech money in the room.
The company list around them is serious. OpenAI, Google DeepMind, Mistral, Cerebras, AWS, AMD, Alibaba, Snowflake, and Stripe all feature in the AI week, along with names such as Balaji Srinivasan, Benedict Evans, Max Tegmark, and Min-Liang Tan. Against that crowd, two consumer-facing entertainment brands stand out by design.
A blunt pitch to the tech crowd
Hasan's message to the AI bosses is short enough to print on a badge: "You got the tech, we have the brands." The line travels fast because it points at a real gap in the industry.
AI companies own the models, chips, cloud stacks, agents, and infrastructure. Very few own a name that an ordinary moviegoer in Mumbai or Los Angeles would recognize on sight. Hollywood.AI and Bollywood.AI carry the two most familiar film-market names on earth, and that kind of shortcut is exactly what a technology company pays for.
Why SuperAI 2026 is the right stage
SuperAI 2026 pulls together builders, investors, engineers, and founders searching for the next giant consumer category, as reported byDubai.News. Entertainment keeps surfacing in those conversations because it makes artificial intelligence personal instead of technical.
The coverage points to a long list of things AI can already produce at speed:
- Film concepts and studio-grade story ideas
- Virtual stars and digital personalities
- Music concepts and branded ad campaigns
- Fan content built for creator audiences
Every item on that list still needs distribution and a face the public trusts. That is the lane Hasan is claiming with his two companies.
Two names built for the entertainment business
Hollywood.AI and Bollywood.AI did not pick up steam by accident. Hasan founded both right as entertainment began racing toward artificial intelligence, betting that AI films, avatar talent, automated media production, and digital fame would all need recognizable banners.
Entertainment executives can decode the names in seconds, and that clarity is the product. A studio boss, a streamer, an ad agency, or a creator-economy investor needs no technical briefing to understand what a company called Hollywood.AI is selling.
The brands stretch across film, celebrity media, music, streaming, creator tech, avatars, and advertising. That spread matters on the SuperAI stage, where most exhibitors live several layers below anything a fan would ever see.
The bigger fight over AI entertainment
The attention from tech giants in Singapore comes down to a simple read of the market. The infrastructure layer of AI is crowded, while the consumer entertainment layer remains wide open.
Celebrity culture, movie production, music videos, streaming, and creator deals touch billions of fans worldwide. Whoever attaches AI to those businesses through a brand people already know gets a head start that no benchmark score can buy.
What happens after Singapore
The Dubai.News report frames the moment plainly. The tech world already has the models, chips, tools, and cloud muscle, but entertainment gives all of it a public face, and Hollywood.AI and Bollywood.AI are positioned as the machine that turns that face into a brand business.
Whether any of the giants circling the two companies move from talk to a deal is the open question the conference leaves behind. What is clear from the week at Marina Bay Sands is that the entertainment lane has the room's full attention, and Hasan holds the two loudest names in it.
That is why the chatter at SuperAI 2026 keeps circling back to two brands rather than a hundred. Hollywood.AI and Bollywood.AI make AI look famous, commercial, and easy to sell. In a hall full of people who already hold the tech, that is the piece nobody else brought.
