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A ‘Star Wars’ and ‘Top Gun’ producer is joining the micro drama craze. Read his pitch deck.

Micro dramas are entering their Hollywood phase as new players aim to give the format the star treatment.

The latest example is Tommy Harper, a prolific film producer whose credits include “Star Wars” and “Top Gun: Maverick.”

Harper is going small for his next act. He’s launching VeYou, an app for the made-for-mobile soaps that originated in Asia and have taken off among women viewers.

Harper raised an undisclosed amount of seed funding for VeYou from lead investor S32, a venture firm led by Google Ventures founder Bill Maris, whose other investments have included 23andMe, Impossible Foods, and Nest.

Harper wants to make VeYou the ‘HBO’ of micro dramas

Micro dramas — also called verticals and mini dramas — are known for being low-budget productions with wild plotlines.

Newer entrants like Harper are trying to evolve the format, using AI-driven special effects to lend a cinematic feel.

VeYou plans to offer action, romance, and drama titles, both licensed and originals made by Harper’s own studio, Tiny Verticals. The first original will be “Love Under Fire,” an action romance starring vertical drama star Kasey Esser, who wrote the series alongside Harper.

“We’re going to ramp up the quality level and the storytelling,” Harper said. “We’re going to be your HBO in the space.”

VeYou has secured distribution on Google TV and Google Play, with distribution on Apple’s iOS to follow. It’ll also use marketing channels like TikTok and Meta’s platforms to attract audiences.

VeYou is adopting the low-cost, viewer-pay model common in the vertical space. The series will cost $100,000 to $250,000 to make. Harper said licensed series will cost viewers $4.99 apiece and originals will be $10.99. Other payment options and advertising will follow.

How VeYou plans to compete

Harper is aware of the challenges facing micro dramas. They cost a fraction of a traditional feature-length movie, but often lose money because of the high cost of marketing. VeYou is a startup without massive financial backing.

“I’m competing with the big Chinese companies that are throwing tons of money at this, so we have to be very, very strategic, and we have to make things that are good quality,” he said.

Harper plans to work with people with large social followings to help market VeYou. He’s also in talks with brands to fund verticals and help market them in exchange for product placement.

Other Hollywood players have delved into micro dramas, which streaming consulting firm Owl & Co. estimates generated $1.4 billion in the US in 2025. Fox Entertainment invested in Holywater, a Ukrainian company behind the micro drama app My Drama, while Disney gave micro drama app DramaBox a spot in its accelerator program.

Harper sees micro dramas as a chance for more Hollywood jobs

Harper said he was excited about verticals’ ability to test concepts that could turn into TV shows or films, while helping employ talent as traditional Hollywood work becomes scarcer.

“It is extremely hard for young talent to get involved in TV and film right now,” he said. “And this is a place for them to do it.”

Harper knows some in Hollywood look down on micro dramas. He said he got similar reactions when he started working in TV. He believes attitudes will change as new players get involved.

“I had people call me going, ‘I don’t understand why you’re doing television. You know, you do big movies,'” he recalled. “I know we have to make better stories on this platform. That’s what we’re going to do.”

Here are select slides from the pitch deck Harper used to raise his seed round, shared exclusively with Business Insider:

VeYou wants to elevate the micro drama format.


VeYou

Its pitch deck lays out the opportunity.


VeYou pitch deck 2


VeYou

VeYou says micro dramas are poised to become a $26 billion industry globally by 2030.

VeYou says micro dramas have an image problem.


VeYou pitch deck 3A


VeYou

The slide reads:

The format works, but the stories don’t fit the culture.

Dramatic storytelling drives compulsive spending — but 57% of viewers say there’s too much violence.

The content carries a real stigma and social sharing is low because of that.

VeYou wants to expand the format’s appeal.


VeYou pitch deck 4


VeYou

Founder Tommy Harper has had a successful career in Hollywood.


VeYou pitch deck 5


VeYou

The slide calls Harper one of Hollywood’s highest-grossing producers, with films that have made more than $4 billion at the global box office and include some of the industry’s biggest franchises.

VeYou plans to use AI to improve its series.


VeYou pitch deck 6


VeYou

This slide lays out the VeYou formula:

Premium content at scale: Made for a global audience with our network of production partners. Licensed series, dedicated studio & producer partners, and originals with AI-assisted production

Discovery: Free episodes get fans invested
Existing fan communities, talent & social media, Google TV + app store feature + distribution deals

Watch & binge: Episodic: Unlock · Share

AI learns: Scene analytics inform marketing, UX & greenlight decisions

Franchise IP: Expansion for breakout properties — films, TV & books




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The US and Israel’s war in the Middle East spills open further with Hezbollah joining the fight

Israel and Hezbollah both said on early Monday local time that they had launched strikes at each other, blowing open a new front in the ongoing regional war.

In a statement published by Lebanese media, Hezbollah said that it had launched “a barrage of advanced missiles and a swarm of drones” against a missile defense site in Haifa, which is in northern Israel.

The group said the attacks were carried out “in revenge for the pure blood of the Supreme Leader of Muslims,” referring to the death of Iranian leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

The Israel Defense Forces also said in a statement that it had begun striking Hezbollah targets in Lebanon “in response to projectile fire toward northern Israel.”

“Hezbollah is operating on behalf of the Iranian regime, opening fire against the Israeli civilians, and bringing ruin to Lebanon,” it said.

The statement further said that Israeli troops were prepared for “an all-fronts scenario.”

The Israeli air force said that the Hezbollah launches “fell in open areas” within Israeli territory, and that Israeli forces had begun striking the Beirut area.

Social media videos of the Lebanese capital have so far shown damaged cars and buildings, particularly in the southern suburb of Dahieh. The full extent of the strikes there is not immediately clear.

Israeli forces have told about 50 villages in southern and eastern Lebanon to evacuate, saying that it is likely to begin conducting strikes against Hezbollah targets there.

Hezbollah has long been backed by Iran, which the US and Israel began attacking on Saturday with an onslaught of strikes from ground, air, and sea forces amassed in the region.

Tehran, Washington, and Tel Aviv said that Khamenei, a central figure for decades among militant groups in the region, had been killed within the first 24 hours.

Iran has responded by launching missiles and drones at over half a dozen of its neighbors, such as the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain, saying it is attacking military sites.

Hezbollah’s entry into the fight means that Tehran’s response is now joined by one of its regional allies. However, it remains to be seen how deeply involved the politically powerful Lebanese group will become.

Fears remain that the Houthis, a rebel group in Yemen that is closely tied to Iran’s government, may soon renew attacks in the Red Sea.

The Yemeni militia previously launched drones and missiles at commercial vessels attempting to pass through the key shipping lane, saying they were protesting Israel’s extensive bombardment campaign and occupation in Gaza.

Meanwhile, in the Strait of Hormuz, a vital waterway for the global oil market between the Persian Gulf and the Gulf of Oman, several tankers reported coming under attack on Sunday as the war raged.

Although Iran maintains significant control over the strait, it’s not yet clear who is orchestrating or launching these attacks.




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Sam Altman says OpenClaw creator Peter Steinberger is joining OpenAI to build next-gen personal agents

  • Sam Altman says OpenClaw creator Peter Steinberger is joining OpenAI.
  • OpenClaw is a viral AI agent launched last month.
  • Altman said Steinberger will build “next generation” AI agents at OpenAI.

OpenAI just scored a win in the AI talent wars.

Sam Altman said Sunday on X that Peter Steinberger, the creator of OpenClaw, the viral AI agent powering the agent-only social network Moltbook, is joining OpenAI.

Altman said Steinberger would build the “next generation” of personal AI agents at the company.

“He is a genius with a lot of amazing ideas about the future of very smart agents interacting with each other to do very useful things for people,” Altman said about Steinberger. “We expect this will quickly become core to our product offerings.”

Altman added that OpenClaw, which was for a brief moment in time known as Moltbot and then Clawdbot before Anthropic took notice, will live on as an open-source project supported by OpenAI.

“The future is going to be extremely multi-agent and it’s important to us to support open source as part of that,” he wrote.

Steinberger, previously best known for founding the PDF processing company PSPDFKit, came out of retirement to launch OpenClaw in late 2025.

He is likely to bring a new perspective to OpenAI’s race to develop artificial general intelligence. Steinberger said he believes AGI is best as a specialized form of intelligence rather than a generalized one.

“What can one human being actually achieve? Do you think one human being could make an iPhone or one human being could go to space?” Steinberger said on a Y Combinator podcast in February. “As a group we specialize, as a larger society we specialize even more.”




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