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Why AI’s next frontier could be in your living room

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We live in an age of entertainment abundance, yet for some, screens can be a source of friction. According to a recent study by Nielsen, the average viewer spends 12 minutes searching before deciding on content each time they turn on their TV.

That’s just the visible symptom. As entertainment fragments across dozens of apps, devices, and profiles, the living room itself has become a place of negotiation and missed connection. Discovery becomes exhausting, and shared moments are rare.

When you think about it, the TV remains one of the last shared screens in our lives. And so, its role as one of the most important interfaces for AI in the home is growing exponentially.

WHAT IF AI SOLVED FOR CONNECTION, NOT JUST CONTENT?

Here’s where the industry needs to pivot. AI’s role in the living room isn’t to add more features or smarter recommendations. It must do something more fundamental: restore the TV as a shared interface where technology adapts to context, understands who’s in the room, and removes the friction between intent and experience.

This means AI doesn’t just know what you like to watch. It knows what you like doing, what’s happening in the moment, and what the household needs. It’s a system that learns from behavior across the entire connected home, not just from the entertainment app. AI that makes the TV smarter while simplifying family life.

DESIGN HARDWARE AND CONTENT TOGETHER

For decades, TV hardware evolved on one track (brighter, sharper, and bigger) while content platforms evolved on another. This separation created a mismatch: a screen capable of brilliant visuals, constrained by the quality of the stream it receives. More importantly, it locked content and device makers into silos. Each optimizes independently. Nobody optimizes for the experience.

The living room is where that must change. When device makers and creators collaborate from the start, new possibilities emerge, not as features, but as fundamentally better experiences.

This might look like grandparents joining a watch party with their adult children across time zones. The TV recognizes them and automatically adjusts with larger captions, higher contrast, and clearer audio. When they ask a question like, “Who is that actor?”, the answer appears without interrupting the viewing experience. The TV manages the mechanics so they can focus on the connection. For the first time, a screen enables sharing across age, ability, and distance.

This scenario isn’t theoretical. It’s possible when content creators and device makers ask: How would this look if it were designed with a connected, context-aware device in mind? The answer unlocks new formats, from adaptive framing for live sports that reshapes based on who’s watching to real-time contextual information that enhances without cluttering and accessibility that’s invisible rather than buried in settings menus.

That’s the blueprint the industry needs. It’s not about one company. It’s about a category shift, one where hardware, software, and content are engineered together from the start, not bolted on afterward.

A NEW STANDARD FOR EXPERIENCE

Recent Deloitte research confirms that TV is no longer a screen, but an activity where the very idea of watching TV is being redefined across generations. We have a choice. We can treat AI in the living room as a spec race: more processing power, better recommendations, and flashier what matters: bringing people together instead of driving them further apart.

That requires standards for interoperability, so devices and platforms can work together seamlessly. It requires innovative content, creator partnerships, and interactive experiences built on a vision of what TV could be, not what TV is. And it requires the discipline to say no to just features and yes to experiences that reduce friction.

We’re at a pivotal moment. Will the TV be treated as just another screen, or as a shared experience where technology brings households closer together?

Yoonie Joung is president and CEO of Samsung Electronics North America.

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