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If there is a single takeaway from NAB 2026 it’s that the broadcast media industry is rebalancing. The centre of gravity is shifting, the customer base is diversifying, and the definition of “media” is expanding across sectors.
The International Association of Broadcast Manufacturers (IABM) reflected this by changing its five decades old brand to IAMT, standing for the International Association of MediaTech.
In its annual ‘State of Media Tech’ report unveiled at the show, the IAMT revealed that up to half of future revenue growth for its members is coming from parallel markets compared to traditional broadcast. These are verticals like banks, retailers, and schools “organisations that want broadcast-quality production capabilities without the infrastructure complexity that has historically come with them,” said Chris Evans, Head of Knowledge and Insight.
Show organisers capitalised on this by programming a series of ‘Enterprise Video Strategies’ with the aim of bringing TV professionals together with heads of AV to learn lessons from each other.
Creator talent pipeline
With these shifts in mind, it was no surprise to see the creator economy out in full force at NAB this year. IAMT CTO Stan Moote describes a stratified ecosystem: from phone-first hobbyists and semi-professional “solopreneurs” to fully professionalised creators with managers, monetisation strategies, and studio grade workflows.
“We spoke with a manager who represents a hundred influencers,” Moote says. “He’s helping them professionalise – buying lights, cameras, tripods, editing tools. It’s like talent management in film or TV, just with a different pipeline.
One example is the recent phenomenon of microdramas, where platforms hook people into stories with free episodes then attempt to convert them subscribers to watch the full series. According to Natalie Jarvey, Editor of Ankler Media’s Like & Subscribe newsletter speaking at a panel on the topic, it is creators who are going to own the microdrama space.
Evans frames it as a continuum rather than a separate industry. “The idea that creators and media entertainment are two worlds is a misconception. It’s a talent pipeline. Their storytelling techniques such as hooks, pacing, and audience engagement are now influencing traditional media. And on the enterprise side, we’re seeing companies hire internal storytellers and content creators. It’s a multi-faceted ecosystem.”
AI: From hype to hard ROI
AI is no longer the abstract, speculative version of 2023. This year, the focus was on tangible, operational value.
“We’re seeing real AI, not just talk,” said Moote. “AI-driven sign language interpretation; AI orchestration and scheduling that saves money; AI repurposing linear news into vertical formats automatically. And on the business side, AI-powered churn management for streaming platforms.”
IAMT data backs this up: 66% of respondents cite AI/ML as a key technology priority, and 34% say it is the single most important. But buyers are demanding clarity.
“They want outcomes, not buzzwords,” said Evans. “How does this reduce power consumption? How does it reduce operating expenses? How does it increase content output with flat staffing? Those are the questions driving investment.”
Show launches include the latest version of editing assistant Eddie AI with Night Shift mode that turns raw footage into a rough cut while you sleep. In the same ballpark, Adobe was showing the Firefly AI Assistant which is a new agentic tool that can orchestrate complex, multi-step workflows across the company's entire Creative Cloud suite (Photoshop, Premiere, Lightroom, Express, Illustrator etc) as well as third party tools like Kling. As ever, the emphasis is on the creative driving the process while the AI chugs away at pulling the idea together from a variety of apps.
The challenge, though, is that competition is intense with rival vendors claiming to do broadly the same thing. There are plenty of companies, for example, using AI for metadata tagging to achieve similar results.
It’s no longer primarily about quality, because AI has effectively standardised that; quality is now almost assumed. Increasingly, differentiation might simply come down to cost and speed.
“AI is a huge topic everywhere right now,” confirms Hossein ZiaShakeri, SVP, Media and Entertainment, Spectra Logic. “From a storage perspective, the focus is really on how to enrich content so it can be better monetised. Ultimately, it comes down to one core question: how quickly can you find the right piece of content? If you can locate assets quickly, you can repurpose them, build new stories, and unlock more value. That’s the key driver behind a lot of the innovation we’re seeing.”
Immersive, cinematic sports broadcasting
The value of sports rights continues to soar, reckoned by S&P Global to be worth north of $67bn in 2026, along with fan interest in the live event. The pulling power of live broadcast will be self-evident this summer during the FIFA World Cup and was a clear trend at NAB as leading cinema camera makers fielded new versions fit for the stadium.
Chief among these, and arguably the headline grabbing deal of the show even though it was announced beforehand, was ARRI’s sale to Riedel Communications.
ARRI had already begun to expand into live production and under Riedel’s parentage that development will come on leaps and bounds.
“The two companies are highly complementary,” explained founder and owner Thomas Riedel at NAB. “ARRI brings world-class camera technology, while we contribute expertise in transmission, both wired and wireless, network control, processing, video servers, and live production solutions.
“We won’t lose sight of ARRI’s legacy,” he added, “but expanding into live sport and entertainment is a natural next step, and it’s an area where we can really add value.”
On cue, ARRI announced new software features for the Alexa 35 Live camera and Live Production System LPS-1. These will be used at the 2026 Eurovision Song Contest in May, which will see 25+ Alexa 35 Live cameras used in partnership with Riedel.
Other cine-cam vendors Sony and RED are also developing their broadcast capabilities. At NAB, RED was showing the latest version of its Cine-Broadcast Module which includes an automatic record-triggering via external tally commands from the video switcher. This means R3D files are captured only for the portions of an event actually directed live, which should significantly cut post-production overhead and making it straightforward for editors to relink to the camera raw source.
CBS Sports and NBC Sports have already used the broadcast module, while Fuse Technical Group has captured several concerts using RED cameras.
What started as a stylistic experiment has become the new visual language of sports broadcasting, where storytelling, emotion and image texture define the fan experience. As ARRI’s Corporate Development Expert Philip Durst put it, “The line between sports and cinema has all but disappeared: every frame now carries emotional purpose, and every production decision – lens choice, camera angle, colour tone – serves the larger narrative of human performance.
“What used to be a race for higher resolution and faster frame rates has transformed into a creative movement driven by Hollywood-style storytelling.”
That race has now gone to the next level: live immersive content.
On the showfloor, RED demonstrated an 8K live streaming basketball demo built around RED Connect and an output to an Apple Vision Pro. Live streamed immersive VR has been promised for a while now, but the pieces are beginning to fall into place.
Blackmagic Design made the biggest waves in this area by debuting the URSA Cine Immersive 100G, an immersive cinema camera with dual 8Kx8K RGBW sensors costing $26,495. A series of live Lakers games have already been captured in the format for viewing on Vision Pro.
“Live immersive production is here, and it’s extraordinary,” said Grant Petty, CEO, Blackmagic Design. “URSA Cine Immersive 100G makes it possible, and the images from this camera are just incredible to watch. It truly feels like you’ve been transported to the middle of the action. From sports to concerts, this opens up an entirely new world in live production.”
Camera tech to watch
Announced last year as a kickstarter project and shipping from May 1 is the new Spark high-speed camera from Pixboom claiming 4K at 1,000fps. This compact Super 35 global-shutter camera could give Phantom a run for its money in slow-motion work since, at €12,000, it costs many times less, and the global shutter is useful for fast motion sports or action movies, nature docs and volumetric camera arrays where RED cameras dominate. A 12-bit RAW sensor pushes dynamic range to 14 stops was announced at NAB, along with internal ProRes RAW recording that streamlines post into Resolve.
GoPro arrived with a new range of action cameras headlined by the €600 Mission 1 Pro which can shoot 8K resolution at 60fps or 4K at 240fps from a 50MP sensor. A Mission 1 Pro ILS version, due later in the year, will accept interchangeable lenses from a Micro Four Thirds mount. The company claimed this to be one of its most significant product launches ever, as it targets winning back prosumer market share from Chinese competitors like DJI (Osmo Action 5 Pro) and Insta360 (Ace Pro).
A new drone caught the attention. Touted as the world’s first all-in-one 8K 360 drone, the Antigravity A1 (which launched last year and is made by a subsidiary of Insta360) reinvents aerial filming with video-game inspired control. The operator of the A1 ‘views’ a first-person perspective through a pair of goggles and uses either head movements or gestures from a Wii-style hand control. It costs €1280 and weighs less than 250g.
Colour and edit tools are merging fast
Adobe debuted Colour Mode which is built directly into Premiere’s editing interface reducing the need for separate specialist (i.e. actual colourist) workflows. In Adobe’s words, this is a “completely new colour grading system” with a new operations system for grade management and dozens of built-in styles and modules. One of those offers complete cinematic looks applied in one click. In linking colour grading with editing Adobe is competing with Blackmagic Resolve which has offered this for a while. All the tributes to Adobe’s move seem to come from creators, rather than professional video editors, which is where its target market lies for this initial launch at least.
Until now, the workflow between edit and grade (offline and online) required much back and forth between systems, people and facilities but developments like Adobe’s are collapsing this. Imagen Video has gone a step further and made its AI-driven editing platform available to the colour grading tools in Premiere and Resolve. It offers AI Profiles trained on professional colour styles with support for custom LUTs and can deliver a baseline grade up to “10 times faster” than traditional, manual methods, it claimed.