Runway dropped Studio Trim yesterday, June 18, a unified panel to trim, stitch, reorder and export finished cuts without leaving the app — and it's on every subscription tier, free included. It lands right after Aleph 2.0 (June 2) brought text-prompt editing of existing clips up to 30 seconds with five keyframes, and Seedance 2.0 Fast (June 5) for cheap 480p/720p drafts. If you're already in Runway, your post-production round-trips just got shorter.
Kuaishou launched Kling 3.0 Turbo on June 17, a speed-and-cost mode pumping out 1-to-15-second previews at 480p/720p, up to roughly 20x faster than full 3.0, built for testing motion and framing before you spend on the big render. Pricing runs about ¥0.8/sec at 720p and ¥1/sec at 1080p with audio bundled, and they refreshed Kling 3.0 Omni for cleaner 4K edits the same day. ComfyUI already wired in a Kling V3-Turbo partner node in v0.25.1, also June 18.
ComfyUI's v0.25.0 on June 16 is a meaty drop: native Bernini-R support — that's the Apache-2.0 Wan 2.2-based model with an MLLM semantic planner — plus SCAIL-2 character animation, 10-bit video, Gaussian splats, and a new Gemini text node. SCAIL-2 is the headline for animators: it kills the pose-extraction dependency entirely, handling character replacement, multi-character scenes and even animal motion. v0.25.1 followed two days later with the Kling Turbo node.
Separate from the core build, ready-to-run SCAIL-2 workflows posted June 13, so you can pull them straight into ComfyUI today. The big deal is no more wrangling pose extraction or ControlNet rigs just to drive a character — it handles complex performances and multi-character shots natively. For anyone doing consistent-character series content, this trims a whole brittle step out of the chain.
Here's one to respect: TikTok has now labeled over 1.3 billion AI videos using Content Credentials, invisible watermarking and detection models, and AI-app exports carry roughly a 90% chance of auto-labeling whether you toggle it or not. Unlike Meta and YouTube, TikTok issues immediate strikes rather than warnings for unlabeled AI, and it pulled 51,618 synthetic videos in the back half of 2025 — up 340% year over year. Translation: label it yourself, because the platform already knows.
YouTube's January 2026 sweep was its biggest AI-content enforcement yet: 16 channels terminated, 4.7 billion lifetime views and 35 million subscribers wiped, with roughly $10M in annual ad revenue erased. The renamed "inauthentic content" policy targets templated, mass-produced uploads with little variation — not AI itself, which stays monetizable when you add human perspective and narrative. The line in the sand is effort and originality, not the tool.
Worth a workflow slot: Bernini Video, ByteDance's Apache-2.0 release, runs Wan 2.2 as its diffusion base but bolts on an MLLM-based semantic planner for smarter prompt interpretation, and it drops straight into existing ComfyUI graphs alongside your other nodes. With both the core PR (#14216) merged and a standalone RH-Bernini node pack available, local creators get planner-grade prompt adherence without leaving the open-source stack.
Faceless channels — heavily AI-assisted — now account for 38% of all new creator monetization ventures in 2026, up from 12% in 2022, with solo operators reportedly clearing $5K to $50K a month in high-CPM niches like finance and productivity. But virality and revenue still diverge: millions of TikTok views can translate to modest direct payout, which is exactly why durable RPM lives on YouTube long-form and educational formats. Pick the platform to match the payout model, not just the view count.