Preserve the reference
The prompt treats the uploaded image as the only identity reference and asks the model to keep facial structure, age impression, hairstyle, and personal recognizability stable.
Upload one portrait and create a realistic night-match World Cup broadcast crowd-cam clip.
Three sample outputs show the intended night-match broadcast feel: a seated spectator in the stands, shallow depth of field, quiet reaction, and subtle live-TV movement.
The prompt treats the uploaded image as the only identity reference and asks the model to keep facial structure, age impression, hairstyle, and personal recognizability stable.
The first stage creates a night World Cup audience shot with the selected frame, stadium lighting, long-lens compression, and a softly moving crowd around the subject.
The video stage keeps the same seat, outfit, pose, and environment while adding subtle motion, a brief camera-aware reaction, and a quick glance back toward the field.
Use an adult subject photo that you own or have permission to transform.
Choose a reference image with readable facial features and hair shape; the app is built around identity preservation, not full face replacement.
Keep 16:9 for a classic TV broadcast frame, or choose 9:16 when the output needs to fit vertical social video.
Use higher video quality in Settings when you want cleaner stadium lights and crowd detail; the shared app UI will route that setting into the video step.
Create a believable spectator clip for football fan edits, matchday posts, and sports-themed reels.
Place a creator or character portrait into a live broadcast audience shot without turning it into a direct-to-camera performance.
Mock up a North American 2026 World Cup night-stadium atmosphere with floodlights, LED boards, field hints, and crowd energy.
Compare how identity-preserving image generation and first-frame video animation handle subtle spectator motion.
Upload a clear reference, keep the default broadcast prompt, choose your aspect ratio and video quality in Settings, then run the two-step workflow.
Use one portrait or selfie with clear facial features. The app uses it as the only identity reference for the generated World Cup audience still.
Tip: Avoid heavily cropped, filtered, or obscured faces when recognizability matters.
The first step creates the live broadcast screenshot in the selected aspect ratio: seated spectator, night stadium, long-lens sports framing, and crowd depth.
Tip: The subject should look like they are watching the pitch, not posing for the camera.
The second step sends the generated still into Veo and adds natural blinking, breathing, a slight lean forward, subtle camera awareness, and a quick return to the match.
Tip: Use the Settings quality control before generating if you want a higher-quality video output.