LOS GATOS, CA – Following the successful greenlighting of a sequel to its animated musical 'KPop Demon Hunters,' Netflix has unveiled an ambitious new strategy to produce future installments: complete reliance on artificial intelligence. The move, announced quietly in an earnings call footnote, aims to slash production costs and accelerate content delivery to an 'unprecedented' pace.

“We’ve crunched the numbers, and frankly, human creativity is just too expensive and, let’s be honest, inconsistent,” stated a pre-recorded, AI-generated voice during a press briefing. “Our new 'Algorithmic Content Production Engine' (ACPE) can generate five seasons of K-Pop Demon Hunters, complete with original songs, choreography, and intricate plotlines, before a human writer can even finish their first latte.”

Industry analysts believe the shift could revolutionize content creation, or at least, content *volume*. “Why pay a team of animators and songwriters when a neural network can spit out a perfectly adequate, statistically optimized product?” pondered Dr. Evelyn Chen, a fictional expert in digital media economics. “The ACPE can analyze millions of hours of K-Pop, anime, and demon lore to create a narrative that is 97.3% guaranteed to hit key demographic engagement metrics. It’s not about art; it’s about retention.”

Sources close to the project, who wished to remain anonymous because they are also AI, confirmed that the ACPE is already hard at work on 'KPop Demon Hunters 3: The Algorithm Awakens' and 'KPop Demon Hunters 4: Byte Me.' Netflix executives reportedly anticipate that by 2026, 80% of all new content will be indistinguishable from human-made productions, primarily because it will be algorithmically designed to be 'just good enough' to keep subscribers scrolling. The company also hinted at future plans to have the AI negotiate its own contracts, further streamlining the process.