Upload a portrait
Start with one clear selfie, headshot, or upper-body photo where the face is easy to read and identity preservation matters.
Upload one portrait and turn it into a street interview video
Three Shibuya-style interview examples show the app's generated TV frame, portrait animation, handheld motion, and preserved broadcast-caption feel.
Start with one clear selfie, headshot, or upper-body photo where the face is easy to read and identity preservation matters.
The app adds the Shibuya street-interview look with Japanese telop graphics, reaction box, question panel, and microphone cues.
Generate an 8-second interview clip with subtle facial motion, microphone movement, handheld camera feel, and stable TV graphics.
Use an adult subject photo that you own or have permission to transform.
Choose a clear face with enough shoulder or torso detail for a believable street-interview frame.
Avoid source photos that already contain lots of text, because the effect adds broadcast graphics.
Keep the default prompt fixed if you want the Japanese captions and TV layout to stay stable.
Make a social-ready interview gag, creator intro, or character-style clip with the familiar look of Japanese street variety TV.
Use the romance-question box, large telop caption, and shy answer motion for a playful late-night dating-interview feel.
Turn a normal selfie into a broadcast-style reaction moment for reels, fan edits, group chats, and lighthearted posts.
Test how one portrait behaves in a locked Japanese street-TV format without writing a fresh prompt from scratch.
Start with one portrait and generate an 8-second Shibuya interview clip with the app's default TV-show look.
Use a selfie, headshot, or waist-up photo where the face is visible and the subject can plausibly fit a night street-interview frame.
Tip: Photos without heavy filters, face obstruction, or existing text usually give cleaner TV graphics.
Click Generate to prepare the Japanese variety-show frame, then click Generate again to create the interview clip with Shibuya street atmosphere, telop captions, a reaction box, and a microphone in frame.
Tip: If identity changes too much, retry with a sharper source image.
Preview the shy interview answer, then download the result once the face, microphone, camera shake, and preserved graphics look stable.
Tip: Regenerate if the model adds unwanted text or loses the TV layout.
New video models, motion prompts, and one practical generation idea worth testing - quietly delivered every Friday.