Inside how AI is actually being used inside media companies today— and what success looks like when it’s done right.
In this episode of The Media Copilot podcast, Pete Pachal speaks with John Levitt, COO of Elvex, about how AI is actually being adopted inside newsrooms and media organizations today. Not the hype. Not the pitch deck version. The real workflows happening behind the scenes.
Elvex works with major media companies to build internal AI environments that support reporting, fact-checking, content repurposing, sales operations, research, and product strategy. John has a rare view into the daily shift in how teams work, collaborate, and adapt.
This conversation explores:
• How editorial, business, and product teams are already using AI
• Why culture and leadership framing determine whether AI succeeds
• Where AI reduces repetitive work without replacing journalists
• What "context engineering" means and why it matters more than prompts
• How media companies can experiment with AI safely and responsibly
• The next shift toward agent-to-agent workflows and personalized news experiences
If you work in media, journalism, audience growth, newsroom operations, AI product development, or leadership strategy, this episode breaks down what is actually changing and what is coming next.
GUEST: John Levitt
https://www.elvex.com/
https://www.linkedin.com/in/johnmlevitt/
📩 Enjoyed this episode?
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For more AI tools and resources built for media professionals, visit MediaCopilot.ai.
Produced by Pete Pachal and Executive Producer Michele Musso
Edited by the Musso Media Team
Music: “Favorite” by Alexander Nakarada, licensed under CC BY 4.0
© 2025 Musso Media. All rights reserved. © AnyWho Media 2025
What if AI could make us better writers instead of replacing us? The next chapter of the internet may do exactly that by using technology to strengthen creativity rather than erase it.
Tony Stubblebine, CEO of Medium, joins The Media Copilot with Pete Pachal to talk about the new reality of writing in an AI world. As algorithms reshape how stories are created and shared, Stubblebine believes we are entering a writing renaissance where technology helps writers stay focused, authentic, and connected to their readers.
They explore:
If you care about creativity, technology, and the future of storytelling, this is a conversation you should not miss.
📩 Enjoyed this episode?
Subscribe to The Media Copilot on Substack, Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or your favorite app. On YouTube? Tap the Like button and Subscribe to the channel.
For more AI tools and resources built for media professionals, visit MediaCopilot.ai.
🎧 Produced by Pete Pachal and Executive Producer Michele Musso
🎬 Edited by the Musso Media Team
© 2025 Musso Media. All rights reserved.
🎵 Music: “Favorite” by Alexander Nakarada, licensed under CC BY 4.0
© AnyWho Media 2025
What if AI could read your book, learn from it, summarize it, and remix it, all with your permission and a paycheck? Trip Adler is working to make that possible.
Trip Adler co-founded Scribd, helped pioneer book subscriptions, and knows publishing inside and out. Now he’s back with a new mission: protect human creativity in the age of AI.
In this episode of The Media Copilot, Pete Pachal talks with Trip about his latest venture, Created by Humans, a licensing platform that helps AI companies access creative works legally, starting with books.
They dive into:
If you're a writer, publisher, AI builder, or just someone who wants creators to get credit and compensation in the AI era, this is the conversation to hear.
What You'll Learn
Books are emerging as the front line in the battle between human creativity and artificial intelligence and understanding why is key to navigating what comes next. You'll learn how AI rights differ from traditional copyright law and why that distinction matters for anyone working in publishing, media, or technology. It also explains what AI companies can and should be paying to use creative works and how those payments change depending on whether the content is being used for training, reference, or transformation. You will come away with a clearer understanding of why these categories are not interchangeable and why defining each one is essential. Most importantly, the conversation highlights why authors deserve transparency, control, and compensation when their work helps power an AI product.
GUEST: Trip Adler
Co-Founder of Scribd
Founder of Created by Humans
🔗 createdbyhumans.ai | LinkedIn
📩 Enjoyed this episode?
Subscribe to The Media Copilot on Substack, Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or your favorite app. On YouTube? Tap the Like button and Subscribe to the channel.
For more AI tools and resources built for media professionals, visit MediaCopilot.ai.
🎧 Produced by Pete Pachal and Executive Producer Michele Musso
🎬 Edited by the Musso Media Team
© 2025 Musso Media. All rights reserved.
🎵 Music: “Favorite” by Alexander Nakarada, licensed under CC BY 4.0
© AnyWho Media 2025
As AI eats the internet, publishers are fighting to keep control. Raptive’s Chief Growth Officer, Marc McCollum, says it’s not the end of the open web, it’s a chance to rebuild it on creators’ terms.
In this episode of The Media Copilot, host Pete Pachal sits down with Marc McCollum, Chief Growth Officer at Raptive, to talk about the future of media in the age of AI.
Raptive powers over 6,000 creators and 200 enterprise publishers and Marc argues that the key to survival isn’t joining the platforms, it’s owning your audience.
From the impact of AI Overviews on search traffic to the rise of Google Discover as a quiet growth engine, they break down what’s really happening behind the analytics. Marc also calls out Big Tech’s “free-content” problem, explains why licensing and pay-per-crawl models could reshape revenue, and shares why recipe sites might just be the unsung heroes of the AI era.
If you care about the open web, creator independence, or where AI-powered media goes next—this conversation is essential.
WHAT YOU’LL LEARN:
GUEST: Marc McCollum, Chief Growth Officer, Raptive
🔗 raptive.com | LinkedIn
📩 Enjoyed this episode?
Subscribe to The Media Copilot on Substack, Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or your favorite app. On YouTube?
Tap the Like button and Subscribe to the channel 🔔
For more AI tools and resources built for media professionals, visit MediaCopilot.ai.
🎧 Produced by Pete Pachal and Executive Producer Michele Musso
🎬 Edited by the Musso Media Team
© 2025 Musso Media. All rights reserved.
🎵 Music: “Favorite” by Alexander Nakarada, licensed under CC BY 4.0
© AnyWho Media 2025
Local news without politics, crime, or chaos? Meet the startup making it happen.
In this episode of The Media Copilot, host Pete Pachal talks with Ryan Heafy, co-founder of 6AM City, about how his team is flipping the script on community journalism—using AI to scale responsibly while keeping human editorial judgment at the center.
Discover how they’ve expanded from a few test cities to 410+ local markets with a “Seed-to-Profit” model, how their anti-scraping strategy builds trust from the ground up, and why they just acquired controversial AI startup Good Daily—not for the headlines, but for the infrastructure.
Whether you're in media, tech, marketing, or just want smarter news in your inbox, this one's for you.
WHAT YOU’LL LEARN:
👥 GUEST:
Ryan Heafy — Co-Founder & Chief Local Officer, 6AM City
🔗 LinkedIn | 🌐 6amcity.com
📩 Enjoyed this episode?
Subscribe to The Media Copilot on Substack, Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or your favorite app. On YouTube? Tap the Like button and Subscribe to the channel 🔔
For more AI tools and resources built for media professionals, visit MediaCopilot.ai.
🎧 Produced by Pete Pachal and Executive Producer Michele Musso
🎬 Edited by the Musso Media Team
© 2025 Musso Media. All rights reserved.
🎵 Music: “Favorite” by Alexander Nakarada, licensed under CC BY 4.0
© AnyWho Media 2025
Social feeds turned news into a rage machine. Cory Ondrejka says it’s time for a reset! Use AI to cut the noise, respect your time, and deliver journalism that actually matters.
For years, the way we consume news has been warped by engagement algorithms that reward outrage and overwhelm. With attention hijacked and trust eroding, millions have simply tuned out. But what if AI could help fix what it broke?
On this episode of The Media Copilot, host Pete Pachal talks with Cory Ondrejka, former Facebook and Google exec (and co-creator of Second Life), now at SmartNews, where he leads the development of NewsArc; an AI-powered app that curates the best single article on each major news event. No doomscrolling, no junk summaries, and no ragebait. Just clarity, curation, and a front page you can trust.
Why this matters now:
News avoidance is at record highs, and trust in media is cratering. NewsArc offers an alternative: a shared, AI-assisted “Daily Dozen” that highlights the most informative reads, respects journalistic integrity, and compensates publishers fairly. With LLMs used for claim-checking, not content theft, the app delivers a smarter, calmer news experience for readers who want to be informed, not inflamed.
Key Topics:
🔹 Why social feeds broke the news
🔹 How NewsArc uses AI to elevate not replace journalism
🔹 The problem with summaries and the power of “claim-level” analysis
🔹 Why a shared front page matters in a polarized world
🔹 How SmartNews compensates publishers in the LLM era
🎙 Guest:
Cory Ondrejka | EVP, SmartNews / Creator of NewsArc
LinkedIn | smartnews.com
📩 Enjoyed this episode?
Subscribe to The Media Copilot on Substack, Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or your favorite app.
On YouTube? Tap the Like button and Subscribe to the channel 🔔
For more AI tools and resources built for media professionals, visit MediaCopilot.ai.
🎧 Produced by Pete Pachal and Executive Producer Michele Musso
🎬 Edited by the Musso Media Team
© 2025 Musso Media. All rights reserved.
🎵 Music: “Favorite” by Alexander Nakarada, licensed under CC BY 4.0
© AnyWho Media 2025
AI engines are siphoning off billions in value from publishers.
Bill Gross says it’s time to flip the model: charge for crawls, share revenue on answers, and build the “conversation layer” that keeps audiences engaged.
If the 2010s were about gaming Google with SEO, the 2020s are about surviving AI’s takeover of distribution. Global pageviews are down 25% in a year, roughly $100B in value shifted from websites to AI engines without compensation. Bots now outnumber human visitors by staggering ratios, and publishers are footing the bill.
On this episode of The Media Copilot, host Pete Pachal talks with Bill Gross, founder of ProRata and creator of Gist AI, an ethical AI search platform backed by 750 publishers. Gross makes the case for a new deal: pay publishers when AI crawls their sites, share revenue when AI uses their work, and build experiences that move beyond “ten blue links” to true conversations with audiences.
Why this matters now:
Web traffic is plunging and is down 250 billion views a day, or about $100 billion a year in lost value. Bots now scrape far more than they give back, with Google at 12:1 and some AI engines hitting 1,200:1, leaving sites like Wikipedia footing huge server bills. Bill Gross’s solution is Gist AI, a publisher-backed search platform with 750 partners, 30 million documents, and a 50/50 revenue share model.
Key Topics:
🔹 The economics of zero-click search
🔹 Why one-time licensing checks won’t sustain publishers
🔹 How “sponsored supplements” could reinvent ads in AI answers
🔹 Why publishers should stop chasing SEO tricks and focus on true value
🔹 What Gross calls the “conversation layer” and why it’s the next big battleground
🎙 Guest:
Bill Gross | Founder & CEO, ProRata | https://www.linkedin.com/in/billgrossidealab
📩 And if you enjoyed this conversation, I’d encourage you to follow the show on Substack, Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or any other podcast app that you want. Also, I’d appreciate it if you’d leave a rating or review — it really does help the show. And if you’re on YouTube, don’t forget to “like” the video and subscribe to the channel 🔔
You can also subscribe to The Media Copilot newsletter and visit mediacopilot.ai for exclusive resources, tools, and AI training courses built specifically for media professionals.
This episode of The Media CoPilot was produced by Pete Pachal, Executive Producer Michele Musso, and with video/audio editing by the Musso Media team. Produced by Musso Media. © 2025 Musso Media. All rights reserved.
Music: Favorite by Alexander Nakarada, licensed under Creative Commons by Attribution 4.0 License
© AnyWho Media 2025
If the last decade was about platforms swallowing the press, the next one is about AI mediating everything…how we find news, what we trust, and who gets paid.
On this episode of The Media Copilot, host Pete Pachal welcomes Justin Hendrix, CEO and editor of Tech Policy Press, a nonprofit dedicated to provoking debate at the intersection of technology and democracy. Hendrix’s path from The Economist to NYC Media Lab to founding a policy newsroom, shapes a rare perspective; he speaks policy, product, and press. Who sets the rules for AI and media—industry, government, or the public? Justin Hendrix argues the answer starts with competition policy and ends with better equilibria for democracy.
Topics we cover
🔹 Copyright and AI training: The battle between fair use and “giant theft,” why the U.S. path may be decided in court, and how commercialization complicates the ethics.
🔹 Power concentration: How antitrust and the Digital Markets Act could serve as tectonic levers to rebalance control between platforms and publishers.
🔹 Quality versus “good enough”: AI hallucinations, the shift to AI as the first stop for answers, and what’s at stake when accuracy is the product.
🔹 The “beat China” argument: Why urgency-driven narratives risk steamrolling communities, due process, and environmental review in the name of AI infrastructure.
🔹 Search, remedies, and AI distribution: What Google’s antitrust outcomes could mean for AI-driven search and publisher leverage.
🔹 Where media could go next: Licensing to AI agents, building owned agents, or a future where AI firms hire thousands of journalists themselves.
🔹 Policy capacity and trust: Why the government’s tech knowledge gap matters and how Tech Policy Press is helping close it for lawmakers and regulators.
🔹 Behavior shift: From NPR commutes to chatbot conversations, and the emerging risks of AI companionship and blurred lines between utility and dependency.
Guest: Justin Hendrix — CEO/Editor
Tech Policy Press :https://www.techpolicy.press/
📩 And if you enjoyed this conversation, I’d encourage you to follow the show on Substack, Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or any other podcast app that you want. Also, I’d appreciate it if you’d leave a rating or review — it really does help the show. And if you’re on YouTube, don’t forget to “like” the video and subscribe to the channel 🔔
You can also subscribe to The Media Copilot newsletter and visit mediacopilot.ai for exclusive resources, tools, and AI training courses built specifically for media professionals.
This episode of The Media CoPilot was produced by Pete Pachal, Executive Producer Michele Musso, and with video/audio editing by the Musso Media team. Produced by Musso Media. © 2025 Musso Media. All rights reserved.
Music: Favorite by Alexander Nakarada, licensed under Creative Commons by Attribution 4.0 License
© AnyWho Media 2025
Publishers don’t need bigger walls—they need dials. Here’s how to see, price, and shape LLM and agent activity instead of getting steamrolled by it.
If the last two years were about discovering that AI agents are vacuuming up the web, the next two will be about deciding what to do about it. Do you block, meter, license - or build your own agent and make the bots pay?
On this episode of The Media Copilot, host Pete Pachal welcomes Aurélie Guerrieri, Chief Growth Officer at DataDome, a Forrester-recognized leader in bot defense. Together, they dive into the new reality of AI-driven traffic: from LLM crawlers and real-time “prompt-time fetching” to the rising tide of agentic activity that acts on users’ behalf. Instead of framing the debate as simply good bots versus bad bots, the conversation explores a more practical lens: identity versus intent, and how publishers can reclaim control, revenue, and visibility in an internet increasingly shaped by AI distribution.
Why this matters now
🔹Scale & speed broke the old defenses. Content Delivery Networks (CDNs - servers that cache and deliver website content from locations closer to users) and Web Application Firewalls (WAFs - security systems that filter and monitor HTTP traffic between users and web applications) still matter, but they adapt in minutes. Attackers now act in seconds and from distributed IPs that look like everyday users.
🔹AI changed the mix of traffic. DataDome sees enormous growth in prompt-time fetching - LLMs hitting your most valuable pages (latest articles, pricing, paywalled previews) 20:1 compared with traditional crawling in some cases.
🔹The business model is shifting. “Open web” ≠ “open season.” Publishers need to decide who gets access, for what, and at what price - and they need tooling that can enforce those choices in real time.
“AI is part of the problem—and part of the solution. We use AI to fight AI.” - Aurélie Guerrieri
How can publishers fight back against AI bots—and turn them into new revenue streams instead of lost traffic?
Key topics:
🔹Why the future of AI governance is about identity and intent, not just “good vs. bad bots”
🔹How prompt-time fetching targets publishers’ most valuable content in real time
🔹The rise of agentic activity and why it can be both powerful and dangerous
🔹Why static defenses like content delivery networks (CDNs) and web application firewalls (WAFs) are being outpaced
🔹How DataDome uses AI to fight AI, stopping more attacks and restoring visibility
🔹New monetization models: pay-per-fetch, APIs, and even building owned agents
🔹Lessons from Cloudflare vs. Perplexity and what they mean for publisher control
🔹Guerrieri’s advice to media leaders: measure, control, and experiment
Her bottom line: the future of publishing isn’t about keeping bots out, but about shaping how they come in—and making them pay for the privilege.
🎙 Guest:
Aurélie Guerrieri | CGO, DataDome | LinkedIn
📩 And if you enjoyed this conversation, I’d encourage you to follow the show on Substack, Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or any other podcast app that you want. Also, I’d appreciate it if you’d leave a rating or review — it really does help the show. And if you’re on YouTube, don’t forget to “like” the video and subscribe to the channel 🔔
You can also subscribe to The Media Copilot newsletter (link in show notes) and visit mediacopilot.ai for exclusive resources, tools, and AI training courses built specifically for media professionals.
This episode of The Media CoPilot was produced by Pete Pachal, Executive Producer Michele Musso, and with video/audio editing by the Musso Media team. Produced by Musso Media. © 2025 Musso Media. All rights reserved.
Music: Favorite by Alexander Nakarada, licensed under Creative Commons by Attribution 4.0 License
© AnyWho Media 2025