AI content is everywhere, and most of it looks the same. Teams are stitching together half a dozen tools to generate clips, captions, and avatars, and the output is interchangeable. It trends for a day and disappears. It does not understand the audience it was made for. That sameness has a name now. People call it AI slop.
The shift is already happening. The audiences are on short-form video. The content is stuck in audio. As Will Pearson of iHeartMedia put it:
That gap is the reason we built FewCuts.
The problem is not making clips. It is making clips that work.
Long-form creators are sitting on a goldmine they cannot use. Podcasters, radio hosts, and video shows produce hours of content every week, and almost none of it reaches the short-form feeds where new audiences actually discover them. The distance between a two-hour episode and a fifteen-second clip that performs is brutal to cross. It takes an editor, a sense of pacing, and an instinct for what lands. Most creators do not have the time, and the generic tools do not have the judgment.
So the content stays buried. The audience never finds it. The scroll moves on.
What we built, and why it is different
FewCuts takes any long-form content you have: podcasts, radio shows, interviews, lectures, and turns it into short-form video that is ready to post. We give an audio-only show a face. We add captions, visuals, music, and pacing built for the scroll.
The difference is what sits underneath. FewCuts is not trained on what is trending across the entire internet. It learns what wins in your niche, and the more you use it, the sharper your clips get. A finance show and a comedy podcast do not perform for the same reasons, and a tool that treats them the same produces slop for both. We treat them differently on purpose.
Who it is for
FewCuts is for anyone with a library of long-form content and no realistic way to turn it into short-form at scale: independent podcasters, radio networks, and video shows alike. We are already in conversations with some of the largest names in audio, and we open new pilot programs every week.
What we believe
AI should be a partner and a collaborator, not a slop machine, and not a replacement for the people who make content meaningful. The only barrier to creating should be the idea itself. Everything else is friction worth removing.
For every creator sitting on hours of work the world has never heard, that gap is the thing we exist to close.
missed scroll.