He’s building an AI media empire
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Episode highlights:
[00:00:00] The vision: media customized to one person
[00:02:15] Why revenue isn’t the point — yet
[00:03:18] Seeing early personalization at Spotify
[00:06:00] Why kids’ content felt broken
[00:07:48] Making the child the hero of the story
[00:08:42] The hardest problem: image consistency
[00:11:24] Why scaling AI products is nothing like demos
[00:14:06] Personalized media won’t replace broadcast — it adds new behavior
[00:16:21] Why parents are the buyer, not the consumer
[00:20:51] Bedtime as a repeatable ritual
[00:23:42] Why Dream Stories is a service, not a novelty product
[00:28:12] Distribution is the real bottleneck
[00:32:15] Why repeat purchases beat subscriptions
[00:39:00] From “pull” products to “push” experiences
[00:45:00] Context and memory as the real moat
[00:50:06] Learning directly from customers
[00:54:09] Synthetic data and AI-generated avatars
[00:59:06] Automating PR and support with AI
In this episode, Andrew Warner talks with Ricardo, founder of Dream Stories, a company using AI to create fully personalized children’s books where each child becomes the hero of their own story.
Ricardo shares how a simple idea — making a better bedtime story for his own son — turned into a scalable business with tens of thousands of unique characters created. But more importantly, he lays out a bold vision: a future where movies, TV shows, books, and media are customized for a single person, not the masses.
They dive deep into what it actually takes to build a consumer AI company beyond demos and hype — from image consistency problems and synthetic data, to distribution, paid acquisition, and turning one-time novelty purchases into repeat behavior.
This is a rare, honest look at where AI-generated media is headed — and what founders should really be building right now.
