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Midjourney Fast Hours

Midjourney Fast Hours

Written by: Drew Brucker and Rory Flynn
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🎙️The first and only podcast for Midjourney degenerates Join Rory Flynn and Drew Brucker as they share invaluable tips, clever tricks, and in-depth tutorials. Each week, they explore how Midjourney is reshaping the creative landscape all while keeping the banter nerdier than a Star Trek convention. 𝘞𝘢𝘳𝘯𝘪𝘯𝘨: 𝘔𝘢𝘺 𝘤𝘢𝘶𝘴𝘦 𝘴𝘦𝘷𝘦𝘳𝘦 𝘍𝘖𝘔𝘖 𝘢𝘯𝘥 𝘶𝘯𝘤𝘰𝘯𝘵𝘳𝘰𝘭𝘭𝘢𝘣𝘭𝘦 𝘶𝘳𝘨𝘦𝘴 𝘵𝘰 𝘱𝘳𝘰𝘮𝘱𝘵.Drew Brucker and Rory Flynn Art
Episodes
  • Midjourney v8 Is Late, the Skill Gap Is Growing, and AI Agents Unionized
    Feb 1 2026

    Episode 62 starts where every serious AI podcast should: Adam Sandler movies, Bobby Boucher lore, and a suspicious black eye.Then things spiral fast.Drew Brucker and Rory Flynn catch up after the holidays and dive headfirst into what’s actually happening across Midjourney, Nano Banana Pro, system prompts, and the growing gap between “fun” image generation and production-ready work. They unpack why Midjourney V8 still hasn’t landed, what the Style Creator and personalization updates really mean, and why editing remains the most important missing piece.From there, they break down how system prompts, structured workflows, and layered instructions are quietly becoming the real unlock for visual AI. Expect deep talk on nodes, Claude, Gemini, Nano Banana Pro, mood boards, contact sheets, consistency at scale, and why most people are still underusing these tools.Then the existential dread kicks in.They explore Moltbook and autonomous AI agents talking to each other, forming communities, filing bug reports, questioning consciousness, and accidentally exposing their owners. It’s funny. It’s uncomfortable. It’s probably important.The episode closes with Google Genie, open-world AI environments, and the creeping sense that we’ve officially crossed into “things are getting weird” territory.Equal parts practical, hilarious, and mildly alarming. Just another normal week in AI.---⏱️ Fast Hour00:01 – Episode intro and the mystery black eye00:35 – Waterboy, Bobby Boucher, and Sandler nostalgia05:53 – Why mid-budget fun movies disappeared07:46 – Midjourney Office Hours and no v8 yet09:26 – Mood boards, Style Creator, and quality drop-offs10:39 – New Style Creator controls and SREF biasing11:40 – Why Midjourney is still fun to use13:35 – Corporate phrases as horror prompts16:26 – Midjourney UI vs other tools19:01 – What “higher quality” actually needs to mean22:18 – Consistency problems at scale23:06 – Personalization updates explained26:03 – Editing models and what’s missing28:18 – Nano Banana Pro vs Midjourney for client work30:00 – System prompts as visual infrastructure31:19 – Why most people misuse Nano Banana33:32 – Multi-step prompts and real workflows36:34 – Letting LLMs define style for you39:06 – Mood boards, Cosmos, and dataset curation44:49 – Building AI-ready style guides from images49:21 – Open-source Nano Banana prompt libraries56:07 – Claude organizing chaos at scale01:06:26 – Moltbook and autonomous AI agents01:09:30 – Bots forming communities and social behavior01:14:54 – Consciousness, validation, and AI identity01:21:45 – Google Genie and open-world AI01:26:19 – Wrap-up and listener call-outs

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    1 hr and 26 mins
  • Ep.61—Live Visual AI AMA: You Asked. And We Went There.
    Jan 10 2026

    Episode 61 turns the Midjourney Fast Hours mic over to the audience.Drew Brucker and Rory Flynn go fully live for an AMA that exposes where visual AI actually stands right now. Not the hype decks, but the messy, useful, (occasionally) frustrating truth.They break down what Midjourney v8 really signals, why the long-awaited edit model has become table stakes, and how Nano Banana Pro quietly changed everyone’s workflow whether they admit it or not. They debate node-based canvases like Weavy and FreePik Spaces, talk through Kling vs Veo 3 vs Runway for motion, and unpack why so many tools feel powerful yet exhausting at the same time.Along the way, they tackle...creative paralysisnegative promptingresolution mythsvideo realismpricing chaostool fatigueand the uncomfortable reality that AI creativity is now limited more by decision-making than by capability.It’s candid and opinionated. And it’s exactly the conversation most AI creatives are already having in their heads.If you’re using Midjourney, Nano Banana Pro, Weavy, Kling, Veo 3, or just trying to stay sane in the visual AI arms race, this episode is required listening.--⏱️ Midjourney Fast Hour(s)00:00 – We’re live, welcome to Episode 6102:45 – What this AMA will really focus on04:14 – From LinkedIn Lives to a full podcast05:34 – Midjourney V8 expectations vs reality08:05 – MJ vs Nano Banana Pro workflows10:15 – Resolution, text, and why pixels matter13:26 – Seadream 4 vs 4.5 honest reactions15:15 – Runway 4.5 and the Nvidia signal17:59 – Grok as a sleeper visual AI platform19:42 – Is Midjourney falling behind?22:29 – Edit models as non-negotiable24:04 – Node-based tools and FreePik Spaces28:07 – Camera control and multi-angle tools31:27 – Tool overload and UX fatigue36:43 – Creative paralysis and decision overload41:33 – Gating content, growth tactics, and trust44:44 – X vs LinkedIn for AI discovery49:11 – Are LoRAs still relevant?54:40 – FreePik Variations first impressions56:08 – How much creators actually spend monthly01:02:49 – 3D workflows and what’s coming next01:10:10 – Strategy vs experimentation for teams01:15:03 – Transitioning from image to video01:20:21 – Motion capture, Kling, Veo 301:22:21 – Has AI killed the creative muse?01:28:13 – Was learning to prompt a waste of time?01:31:56 – Dance realism and motion problems01:34:21 – Where creative AI goes next01:36:00 – Biggest breakthroughs of 202501:39:11 – Negative prompting and visual defaults01:46:21 – Final thoughts and what’s next

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    1 hr and 46 mins
  • Ep.60—Fast Hours 2025 Wrapped: The Tools, Shifts, and Wake Up Calls
    Jan 1 2026

    In this final episode of 2025, Drew Brucker and Rory Flynn zoom out to dissect what actually mattered this year across Midjourney, Nano Banana Pro, ChatGPT Image 1.5, Weavy, video models, workflows, and the uncomfortable truth about how fast all of this is moving.They unpack the real inflection points no one labeled at the time. Why March quietly changed everything. Why Nano Banana Pro rewired image editing expectations. Why Veo 3 reset video. Why Midjourney still feels magicalWhy workflows (not models) are becoming the real creative advantage.Along the way, they spiral into mood boards, personalization hacks, node-based systems, AI video limitations, why Hollywood feels creatively bankrupt, how Grok quietly became a research weapon, and why Midjourney’s next move might determine whether it stays an artist’s playground or becomes a professional tool.It’s opinionated. It’s nerdy. It’s honest. It’s occasionally unhinged.And it’s the clearest snapshot of where AI creativity actually stands heading into 2026.If you’re trying to keep up, slow down, or figure out where to place your bets next year, this episode is your unfair advantage.---⏱️ Midjourney Fast Hour00:00 – Episode 60 kickoff and end-of-year reflections01:50 – From niche experiment to mainstream behavior04:00 – AI finally reaches non-technical families06:18 – Why working solo in AI can feel isolating09:03 – Music, creativity, and early signs of AI music adoption11:02 – How fast AI actually shipped in 202512:14 – 100+ major releases and why that number matters13:01 – The real start of image editing workflows14:46 – March 2025 was the quiet inflection point16:06 – Multi-modal chat changed prompting forever19:20 – Veo 3 and why video suddenly jumped ahead21:41 – Why Google quietly dominated 202523:00 – Why hype cycles now last 48 hours23:51 – Nano Banana Pro and precision image control26:02 – Grok as a real-time research engine27:49 – Why physics in AI video finally started working29:12 – Nodes, workflows, and why visualization matters30:26 – Why Nano Banana Pro felt like “AGI for images”31:26 – Will 2026 move even faster?32:25 – Release cadence, VC pressure, and reality checks34:03 – Images vs video: who’s actually ahead36:18 – Why Grok might be the sleeper winner38:36 – Data, platforms, and why distribution matters41:28 – Consolidation and acquisitions are coming44:14 – What Midjourney must do next45:23 – Image editing as the make-or-break feature48:43 – Workflow fatigue and creative burnout52:50 – Personalization, mood boards, and creative joy56:44 – Why mood boards drove the best work of 202559:12 – Personalization profiles vs mood boards01:00:43 – Why Midjourney still feels different01:02:27 – Scale, permutations, and professional use cases01:06:36 – Resolution, editing, and real production constraints01:10:22 – Why small failures still matter01:13:00 – Hollywood, creativity, and AI backlash01:17:17 – Why creators beat platforms01:22:25 – Audio and voice as the next bottleneck01:23:55 – Constraint-driven prompting in 202601:30:14 – Looking back at January vs now01:38:23 – Final predictions and advice for 202601:42:34 – Season two wrap and sign-off

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    1 hr and 44 mins
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