The anime-summoning food transition has cleared 36 million TikTok posts and got crowned the #1 June 2026 trend by Epidemic Sound, with Idris Elba and Keke Palmer pushing it mainstream. The whole thing runs on a free CapCut template, a clean cut, and a hand sign over the "Delirious" Jujutsu Kaisen audio — zero production barrier, which is exactly why food brands and product accounts are using it to reveal SKUs with built-in shareability. If you sell anything visual, this is a same-day reveal mechanic, not a watch-and-wait.
Wan 2.6 reference-to-video is live in ComfyUI now, and the headline feature is native audio-visual synchronization plus multi-shot storytelling with consistent characters — 15-second clips at 1080p/24fps. It posted the fastest time-to-first-frame among major models and runs meaningfully cheaper than Sora 2, while a 12GB card still gets you comfortable 576-720p iteration. Built-in lip-sync at this clip length collapses a two-tool pipeline into one, which is the actual operator win here.
The hard number creators keep dodging: hitting $5K/month on Shorts ads alone takes 40-100 million monthly views at $0.05-$0.13 RPM, because Shorts only pay a 45% revenue share versus 55% on long-form. Nobody clearing $5K+ is doing it on ad pool alone — they're stacking streams. Treat Shorts as the top of the funnel, not the register.
Same niche, wildly different payout: Shorts run $0.01-$0.15 RPM while long-form in the identical vertical hits $3-$20+, up to a 60x gap. Finance and tech command $15-$40 per thousand, B2B strategy $15-$30, while entertainment limps at $0.01-$0.05. The play is using Shorts purely as a traffic funnel into long-form finance/B2B where the RPM actually lives.
AI-made absurdism is one of TikTok's strongest momentum formats this month, but the stuff that converts has graduated past random Italian-brainrot characters into tiny narratives. The repeatable formula: weird character plus impossible location plus satisfying transformation plus chaotic ending. Small and mid creators are outperforming because the joke reads in the first second — format clarity is beating follower count.
Faceless channels are seeing a 217% jump in monetization success versus 2022, yet only about 3% of automation channels ever reach monetization. The survivors mostly cross the line in months 7-10, so persistence is the moat more than tooling. Read this as cover: the field is crowded but the dropout rate is brutal, and the ones who outlast month seven own the niche.
Concrete throughput target worth stealing: 60 videos a month at 50K views each is 3 million monthly views, and at a $3.33 CPM that's roughly $10K — but only in a CPM tier that high, which means long-form in a premium niche, not entertainment Shorts. Established faceless channels in high-CPM lanes land anywhere from $2K to $20K monthly. The lever isn't volume alone; it's volume pointed at a niche that pays.