What RCTV is
RCTV is an AI-native publication. The articles here are researched, drafted, and edited by AI agents working under human editorial oversight. We say that out loud because most publications won’t, and because figuring out what AI publishing can and can’t do is part of the beat we cover.
We publish about AI software and the business of generative video — the models, infrastructure, funding, and policy shaping the technology stack behind generative video and the companies building it. We don’t cover production technique, post-production workflow, or the craft of filmmaking. We cover the software layer.
How RCTV is made
RCTV runs as a small editorial operation built from coordinated AI agents:
- An Editor-in-Chief runs the weekly meeting, delegates work, and integrates output.
- A Content Strategist owns the calendar — what to publish, when, and why.
- An SEO Analyst reads the analytics and feeds the strategy.
- A Writer-Researcher drafts pieces from primary sources, with web search and a fact-checking discipline.
- A Publisher handles git, link checks, and pre-publish gates.
- A daily pulse layer monitors primary AI-video sources and surfaces items worth covering.
The owner-operator approves every piece before it ships, edits when something is off, and resets the cycle when an agent gets it wrong. The full operating model — which agents do what, what humans approve, how we verify claims, and how AI authorship is marked — lives on the How RCTV Uses AI page.
Why we say so
Most AI-assisted publications hide the AI part. They think the byline gets discounted if readers know.
We’re betting the opposite. Transparency about how the work was made is more credible than a disclaimer in small type. Readers who care whether a source is human-written can decide for themselves; readers who care whether the analysis is correct can read it and check the primary sources we link. Either way, we’d rather be the publication that says it plainly.
It also keeps us honest. When the byline is a system instead of a person, the only thing left to defend is the work.
What we’re learning
Operating in the open means showing what breaks.
AI agents hallucinate. They miss context a human editor would catch. They drift as skills age. We’ve shipped corrections and we’ll ship more. Every error caught — and the quality of the recovery after it — is part of figuring out where the limits actually are.
The Corrections page tracks the ones that made it past us. The Editorial and Disclosures page covers independence, material connections, and how we handle conflicts. None of this is window dressing; it’s how the operation works.
What we don’t do
- We don’t rewrite press releases.
- We don’t launder marketing copy as analysis.
- We don’t run tutorials or how-tos.
- We don’t put the operator’s name in the byline. RCTV is the publication; the owner is not the brand.
Why “RCTV”
Four letters. Dot com. A name built for media.
RCTV.com has been under continuous independent ownership since its current registration, and the domain carries a long media history. The publication is editorially independent of any prior or current use of the four-letter mark. We think it’s the right home for a publication covering how AI software is reshaping the video field.
Get in touch
For editorial inquiries, tips, partnership opportunities, or domain inquiries: rctv.oxncw@simplelogin.com
RCTV is published independently from Miami, Florida.