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All About Natasha Lyonne's Boyfriend, Bryn Mooser
All About Natasha Lyonne's Boyfriend, Bryn Mooser

Elle

time05-07-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Elle

All About Natasha Lyonne's Boyfriend, Bryn Mooser

Actress Natasha Lyonne famously dated comedian Fred Armisen for a number of years, but fewer people know about her current relationship with media executive Bryn Mooser. The Russian Doll actress has been romantically linked to Mooser since 2023, soon after she admitted she and Armisen had split. While speaking with The Hollywood Reporter in October of that year, Lyonne confirmed the break up when she was asked about whether she still lived in Los Angeles. 'I'm not. I had been there living with Fred and during COVID,' she replied, before joking, 'I honestly think we broke up because I wanted a swimming pool.' More seriously, she added, 'We love each other just about as much as two people can love each other and we're still talking all the time. But Freddy doesn't like a swimming pool. It might seem like a mundane reason for a breakup, but during that pandemic, you've got to get your laps—I'm like Burt Lancaster in The that's the real scandal. I guess I finally am an actual bicoastal.' Here's everything we know about Bryn Mooser and his relationship with Lyonne so far. Bryn Mooser is known as a director and producer, but also a business mogul, especially in regards to media companies. The 45-year-old co-founded Ryot, which focuses on documentaries with virtual and augmented reality, according to his IMDb page. He sold the company to Verizon in 2016, then launched another film and TV studio in 2019, XTR, which also focuses on non-fiction content. He became the CEO of Documentary+ in 2020, per SCMP. Mooser's documentary Body Team 12 won him an Emmy in 2015 and an Oscar nomination for producing. In 2019, he was nominated at the Oscars again for the documentary Lifeboat. Mooser also launched A.I. animation company Asteria Film with Lyonne in 2022, which they both claim is ethically sourced A.I. The pair knew of one another at least as early as 2022, in order to found their company. But rumors that Lyonne and Mooser were dating popped up in 2023, according to the Daily Mail. That was the year they started making appearances at red carpet events, including Macaulay Culkin's Walk of Fame ceremony, followed by the 2024 Golden Globes, the 2025 Independent Spirit Awards, the SNL 50th Anniversary Special, the Chanel Pre-Oscar Awards Dinner, and Vanity Fair's Golden Globe party. At the ISAs, Lyonne told photographers, 'I think I will take a boyfriend picture, thank you so much,' inviting Moser to pose with her.

AI was enemy No. 1 during Hollywood strikes. Now it's in Oscar-winning films
AI was enemy No. 1 during Hollywood strikes. Now it's in Oscar-winning films

Yahoo

time31-03-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

AI was enemy No. 1 during Hollywood strikes. Now it's in Oscar-winning films

Inside a soundstage once used by silent film stars Charlie Chaplin and Mabel Normand, Hollywood executives, actors and filmmakers sipped cocktails as they marvelled at what some say is the biggest breakthrough since the talkies: AI-generated video. But whether AI will be the future, or the end, of cinema is still up for debate. It was only two years ago that actors and writers shut down Hollywood with strikes demanding protections from AI. Now the technology is controversially creeping into TV, movies and video games. Two films honoured at the Oscars even used the technology. As a DJ played '90s hip hop, computer developers rubbed shoulders actors and executives, in a sign of the changing power players in the industry. AI in Hollywood is "inevitable", says Bryn Mooser, the party's host and the co-founder of Moonvalley, which created the AI generator tool "Marey" by paying for footage from filmmakers with their consent. Mr Mooser says that while AI may still be a dirty word, their product is "clean" because it pays for its content. AI may be a dirty word in Hollywood, but Mr Mooser says their version of the technology is "clean." "Artists should be at the table," he says, adding that it's better to build the tool for filmmakers rather than get "rolled over by big tech companies". Artificial Intelligence has long been depicted as a villain in Hollywood. In "The Terminator," AI used by the US military decides it must destroy everyone on Earth. But it's AI's creators, and not the technology itself, that has received the brunt of real-life criticism. Companies use publicly available data to build their AI models - which includes copyrighted material shared online - and creators say they're being ripped off. OpenAI, Google and other tech companies are facing multiple lawsuits from writers, actors and news organizations, alleging their work was stolen to train AI without their consent. Studios like Paramount, Disney and Universal who own the copyright on movies and TV shows have been urged by writers to do the same, though none have taken legal action. "We've all fought very hard for copyright laws, and nobody wants to see their work stolen to have somebody else profit from it," Mr Mooser says. Hollywood has begun toying with the new technology. The Oscar-nominated films Emilia Perez and The Brutalist used AI to alter voices. Adrian Brody won the Academy Award for best actor, even with the help of AI to fine tune his accent when he spoke Hungarian in his starring role in The Brutalist. AI has even been used to de-age actors like Tom Hanks and Harrison Ford. The technology is seemingly everywhere. OpenAI hosted an AI film festival in Los Angeles earlier this month. Marvel directors Joe and Anthony Russo told the Wall Street Journal they plan to invest $400 million to craft AI tools for filmmakers. But the impacts on how it will alter the future of the entertainment industry remain unclear. Generative AI, for instance, allows computers to learn and solve problems in ways that can seem human – albeit much faster. And many worry about the technology replacing their jobs as AI is used to generate scripts, animation, locations, voices and human actors. If you ask OpenAI's popular chatbot, ChatGPT, which Hollywood jobs are most easily replaced by AI, background actors are top of the list as "most vulnerable" with "A-List actors & directors" considered safest because "star power and brand recognition keep top talent irreplaceable". At the Moonvalley party, everyone was talking about new AI technology though few wanted to speak with a reporter on record about it. But dozens of powerful people made the trek east to the hip Silver Lake neighbourhood from West Los Angeles even though it was raining. In LA, that's remarkable. "We're here to learn," said one executive who spent an hour in traffic getting to the party. "We're not signing anything or buying anything, but we're interested." Mooser and his co-founder Naeem Talukdar speak passionately about how AI will transform Hollywood and allow filmmakers to create blockbuster style epics on much lower budgets. It could lead to many bad films - but it could also help discover the next Quentin Tarantino or Martin Scorsese, even if they don't have the backing of a big studio. "This technology is utterly meaningless without the artist at the centre of it; the technology needs to ultimately be subservient to the artist," says Mr Talukdar. Hollywood's foray into using AI comes as the Trump administration prepares a new AI plan for the United States. Tech companies say they can't compete with China under existing US copyright laws and that they need unfettered access to art - from Mickey Mouse to Moana to The Matrix - to train their AI models as a matter of national security. Google and OpenAI want the US government to designate copyrighted art, movies and TV shows as "fair use" for them to train AI, arguing that without the exceptions, they will lose the race for dominance to China. Hollywood filmmakers say tech companies are attempting to undermine the entertainment industry, which they point out supports more than 2.3 million US jobs. "We firmly believe that America's global AI leadership must not come at the expense of our essential creative industries," a group of more than 400 Hollywood A-listers - led by actress/writer Natasha Lyonne who helped develop Moonvalley - wrote in an open letter to the Trump administration, which has been soliciting public comment for its AI Action Plan. The letter's signatories included A-List stars like Ben Stiller, Paul McCartney, Cate Blanchett and Lilly Wachowski, who co-created "The Matrix," which depicts a dystopian simulated reality where humans are enslaved by intelligent machines. Many in Hollywood remain terrified of what AI means for their futures. Outside a Disney Character Voices office earlier this month, dozens of actors picketed against video game companies for refusing to come to an agreement on using AI in video games. "Using actual actors is the key to a lot of the drama and enjoyment that people get from video games," actor DW McCann said. "People have lived experiences that AI just can't understand." The actors want a contract that guarantees their voices and likeness will not be used without their consent to train AI models that replace them in the future. Mr Mooser says AI will allow filmmakers to create amazing art – if it's done right. With humans calling the shots, he says, AI could help them create sets and worlds they couldn't easily access or invent – and to do so much faster than what they could traditionally do with computer graphics and visual effects. "We're trying to say look, technology is going to be in everything. Let's make sure that we try to fight as hard as we can to make sure that it's done in the right way, and that artists aren't run over by big companies." Hollywood writers fear losing work to AI Actors go on strike over video games AI threat 'A tech firm stole our voices - then cloned and sold them' Susan Sarandon on the dangers of AI in film industry Hollywood writers in deal to end US studio strike

AI helped cause Hollywood strikes. Now it's in Oscar-winning films
AI helped cause Hollywood strikes. Now it's in Oscar-winning films

BBC News

time31-03-2025

  • Entertainment
  • BBC News

AI helped cause Hollywood strikes. Now it's in Oscar-winning films

Inside a soundstage once used by silent film stars Charlie Chaplin and Mabel Normand, Hollywood executives, actors and filmmakers sipped cocktails as they marvelled at what some say is the biggest breakthrough since the talkies: AI-generated whether AI will be the future, or the end, of cinema is still up for was only two years ago that actors and writers shut down Hollywood with strikes demanding protections from AI. Now the technology is controversially creeping into TV, movies and video games. Two films honoured at the Oscars even used the technology. As a DJ played '90s hip hop, computer developers rubbed shoulders actors and executives, in a sign of the changing power players in the in Hollywood is "inevitable", says Bryn Mooser, the party's host and the co-founder of Moonvalley, which created the AI generator tool "Marey" by paying for footage from filmmakers with their consent. Mr Mooser says that while AI may still be a dirty word, their product is "clean" because it pays for its content. AI may be a dirty word in Hollywood, but Mr Mooser says their version of the technology is "clean.""Artists should be at the table," he says, adding that it's better to build the tool for filmmakers rather than get "rolled over by big tech companies".Artificial Intelligence has long been depicted as a villain in Hollywood. In "The Terminator," AI used by the US military decides it must destroy everyone on it's AI's creators, and not the technology itself, that has received the brunt of real-life criticism. Companies use publicly available data to build their AI models - which includes copyrighted material shared online - and creators say they're being ripped Google and other tech companies are facing multiple lawsuits from writers, actors and news organizations, alleging their work was stolen to train AI without their consent. Studios like Paramount, Disney and Universal who own the copyright on movies and TV shows have been urged by writers to do the same, though none have taken legal action."We've all fought very hard for copyright laws, and nobody wants to see their work stolen to have somebody else profit from it," Mr Mooser says. Hollywood has begun toying with the new technology. The Oscar-nominated films Emilia Perez and The Brutalist used AI to alter voices. Adrian Brody won the Academy Award for best actor, even with the help of AI to fine tune his accent when he spoke Hungarian in his starring role in The Brutalist. AI has even been used to de-age actors like Tom Hanks and Harrison Ford. The technology is seemingly everywhere. OpenAI hosted an AI film festival in Los Angeles earlier this month. Marvel directors Joe and Anthony Russo told the Wall Street Journal they plan to invest $400 million to craft AI tools for the impacts on how it will alter the future of the entertainment industry remain unclear. Generative AI, for instance, allows computers to learn and solve problems in ways that can seem human – albeit much faster. And many worry about the technology replacing their jobs as AI is used to generate scripts, animation, locations, voices and human you ask OpenAI's popular chatbot, ChatGPT, which Hollywood jobs are most easily replaced by AI, background actors are top of the list as "most vulnerable" with "A-List actors & directors" considered safest because "star power and brand recognition keep top talent irreplaceable".At the Moonvalley party, everyone was talking about new AI technology though few wanted to speak with a reporter on record about it. But dozens of powerful people made the trek east to the hip Silver Lake neighbourhood from West Los Angeles even though it was raining. In LA, that's remarkable."We're here to learn," said one executive who spent an hour in traffic getting to the party. "We're not signing anything or buying anything, but we're interested."Mooser and his co-founder Naeem Talukdar speak passionately about how AI will transform Hollywood and allow filmmakers to create blockbuster style epics on much lower budgets. It could lead to many bad films - but it could also help discover the next Quentin Tarantino or Martin Scorsese, even if they don't have the backing of a big studio."This technology is utterly meaningless without the artist at the centre of it; the technology needs to ultimately be subservient to the artist," says Mr Talukdar. Hollywood's foray into using AI comes as the Trump administration prepares a new AI plan for the United States. Tech companies say they can't compete with China under existing US copyright laws and that they need unfettered access to art - from Mickey Mouse to Moana to The Matrix - to train their AI models as a matter of national and OpenAI want the US government to designate copyrighted art, movies and TV shows as "fair use" for them to train AI, arguing that without the exceptions, they will lose the race for dominance to filmmakers say tech companies are attempting to undermine the entertainment industry, which they point out supports more than 2.3 million US jobs."We firmly believe that America's global AI leadership must not come at the expense of our essential creative industries," a group of more than 400 Hollywood A-listers - led by actress/writer Natasha Lyonne who helped develop Moonvalley - wrote in an open letter to the Trump administration, which has been soliciting public comment for its AI Action letter's signatories included A-List stars like Ben Stiller, Paul McCartney, Cate Blanchett and Lilly Wachowski, who co-created "The Matrix," which depicts a dystopian simulated reality where humans are enslaved by intelligent in Hollywood remain terrified of what AI means for their a Disney Character Voices office earlier this month, dozens of actors picketed against video game companies for refusing to come to an agreement on using AI in video games."Using actual actors is the key to a lot of the drama and enjoyment that people get from video games," actor DW McCann said. "People have lived experiences that AI just can't understand."The actors want a contract that guarantees their voices and likeness will not be used without their consent to train AI models that replace them in the future. Mr Mooser says AI will allow filmmakers to create amazing art – if it's done right. With humans calling the shots, he says, AI could help them create sets and worlds they couldn't easily access or invent – and to do so much faster than what they could traditionally do with computer graphics and visual effects."We're trying to say look, technology is going to be in everything. Let's make sure that we try to fight as hard as we can to make sure that it's done in the right way, and that artists aren't run over by big companies."

Meet Natasha Lyonne's filmmaker boyfriend, Bryn Mooser: the Emmy winner, Oscar nominee and humanitarian who has been dating the star of Orange is the New Black and Big Mouth since 2023
Meet Natasha Lyonne's filmmaker boyfriend, Bryn Mooser: the Emmy winner, Oscar nominee and humanitarian who has been dating the star of Orange is the New Black and Big Mouth since 2023

South China Morning Post

time07-03-2025

  • Entertainment
  • South China Morning Post

Meet Natasha Lyonne's filmmaker boyfriend, Bryn Mooser: the Emmy winner, Oscar nominee and humanitarian who has been dating the star of Orange is the New Black and Big Mouth since 2023

Russian Doll star Natasha Lyonne knows a thing or two about showing off her style … and her man. The multi-Emmy-nominated actress recently attended the 2025 Independent Spirit Awards with her filmmaker boyfriend Bryn Mooser, Lyonne sporting a stunning dress by Rochas, per Harper's Bazaar. The couple made sure to put on a loved-up display for the cameras. Days before that, the Orange is the New Black actress, 45, was with her beau at the SNL 50: The Anniversary Special after-party in New York, wearing a white satin floor-length gown with a black lace bodice. Mooser complemented her look in a classic black tux with a white shirt. Natasha Lyonne and Bryn Mooser at Chanel's 2025 pre-Oscar Awards dinner in Los Angeles. Photo: AP Advertisement More recently, Lyonne, who is also known for the TV shows Big Mouth and Poker Face pitched up with Mooser at the Chanel and Charles Finch annual Pre-Oscar Awards Dinner at The Beverly Hills Hotel's Polo Lounge in Los Angeles, both wearing chic all-black ensembles. 'I think I will take a boyfriend picture, thank you so much,' she told photographers before reaching for Mooser's hand to pose. But when Regé-Jean Page, star of Shonda Rhimes' Regency-era show Bridgerton entered the frame, she casually quipped, 'They're both my boyfriends.' So who is Bryn Mooser, who once made Esquire's Americans of the Year list for his philanthropy? He's a Hollywood executive Natasha Lyonne and Bryn Mooser at the SNL50: The Homecoming Concert in February. Photo: AFP Mooser, 45, is an award-winning director and producer, best known for co-founding Ryot, a documentary-oriented media company that also works with virtual and augmented reality, per his IMDb page. After selling the company to Verizon in 2016, he briefly served as a senior vice-president for the new firm before moving on to launch another film and TV studio, XTR, in 2019. According to The Hollywood Reporter, XTR focuses on non-fiction content. In 2020, Mooser became CEO of Documentary+ and last year he founded LA-based production company Asteria Film, per his LinkedIn page. Mooser won an Emmy and earned an Oscar nomination for producing the 2015 documentary Body Team 12; and in 2019 he received another Oscar nod for documentary Lifeboat (2018). He's a humanitarian

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