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Coming soon

Multi-source footage

Pexels, Pixabay, NARA, Library of Congress, Internet Archive — routed by niche.

Abstract constellation of thumbnail silhouettes connected by faint routing lines.

A history channel should pull from period-correct archives. A finance channel should pull from clean, modern stock. We route the footage hunt by niche so the clips you see fit the channel you ship to.

What it is

A niche-aware orchestrator queries the right sources first: NARA, the Library of Congress, the Internet Archive, British Pathé, and Wikimedia Commons for historical pieces; Pexels and Pixabay for modern documentary and tech. Each query is vision-checked before the clip lands in your timeline so a "1940s tank" prompt doesn't come back with a museum diorama.

Why it matters

Generic stock libraries are why AI documentary footage tends to look generic. Niche routing is what turns a finished render from "good enough" into "channel-fit".

Who it's for

Anyone publishing in a niche where the look of the footage is half the perceived quality — history, science, biography, finance, tech.

What it looks like in practice

A WW2 documentary scene about Anzio (1944) returns three candidates: a NARA archive clip, an Internet Archive newsreel cut, and a British Pathé still. You pick the lead.

Want the longer story? Read how the pipeline actually works on the blog.