‘News is a human need and not a luxury,’ says MBC leader at Arab Media Summit

‘News is a human need and not a luxury,’ says MBC leader at Arab Media Summit
MBC’s Group Director Ali Jaber in Dubai. (AN photo/Abdurrahman Fahad Bin Shulhub)
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Updated 27 May 2025

‘News is a human need and not a luxury,’ says MBC leader at Arab Media Summit

‘News is a human need and not a luxury,’ says MBC leader at Arab Media Summit
  • MBC’s Group Director Ali Jaber highlights social media power
  • Youth mobilized around Gaza as Western media ‘failed’ in duty

DUBAI: “News is a human need and not a luxury,” said MBC’s Group Director Ali Jaber in Dubai on Tuesday.

“It is a need for everyone to know what’s happening around us, a world without news is not a world that we would ever live in,” said Jaber in a session at the Arab Media Summit.

“Social media and traditional media have a complementary relationship, social media has none of the restrictions that traditional media outlets have.

“Social media platforms are not journalistic platforms but can be utilized for that purpose,” he said.

Jaber said social media has proven to influence change in the news world, and cited the crisis in Gaza as an example. Jaber said he believes global outrage from the youth was mobilized by social media.

“Social media moved generations during the Gaza crisis, especially since traditional media in the West failed. Social media filled the gap that was generated by the obvious bias in Western traditional media,” said Jaber.

“Under the motto of freedom of speech, social media is attracting a larger number of audience who are trying to find faster and shorter news to consume,” he said.

Jaber said traditional media needs to implement the quick and fast nature of social media.

“We are in a changing world, it’s naive to say traditional media will stay dominant … We have to teach newsrooms to write 360 news that can be adapted into any form including social media,” he added.

“TV benefited a lot from social media, we use social media as a means of promoting for us, we need to have a community that we can work with around the clock and that is promoted by social media,” he said.

Jaber said although he is an artificial intelligence skeptic, he believes education is key to utilizing this technology safely and to their full potential.

“AI is a real milestone and a great pillar of everything we want to do … AI will be a key part of our work in the journalism world,” he added.

“We need to educate people on how to deal with things like fake news and other problems that may arise from utilizing AI,” he said.


YouTube to roll out AI video generation model Veo 3 on Shorts in MENA

YouTube to roll out AI video generation model Veo 3 on Shorts in MENA
Updated 07 November 2025

YouTube to roll out AI video generation model Veo 3 on Shorts in MENA

YouTube to roll out AI video generation model Veo 3 on Shorts in MENA
  • Veo 3 on Shorts can create high-definition videos in English, but platform said it is looking to expand to more languages and creators
  • According to YouTube’s own figures, 61 percent of Saudi YouTube Shorts users reported that they do not use Instagram Reels

LONDON: YouTube announced on Thursday that it will begin rolling out Veo 3, Google’s most advanced AI video generation model, on YouTube Shorts — free of charge to selected countries in the MENA region — over the coming weeks.

The announcement came during YouTube’s flagship advertiser event, Brandcast, marking the platform’s renewed push into AI as it seeks to solidify its regional presence against competitors TikTok and Meta’s Instagram.

“YouTube has been the launchpad for the creator economy across MENA for over a decade,” said Tarek Amin, YouTube’s regional director for the Middle East, Turkiye & Africa.

“By combining the authentic trust of our creators with powerful AI models like Veo 3, we are offering brands in the region an unmatched ability to drive culture and commerce with audiences they can’t find anywhere else,” he said.

YouTube marked its 20th anniversary since the upload of the historic video, “Me at the zoo,” on April 23, 2005, and has been operating in MENA for more than a decade.

The platform boasts high penetration rates — 94 percent in the UAE and 89 percent in — making it the dominant video-sharing platform in the region.

According to YouTube’s data, which it described as “significant and unique,” 61 percent of Saudi YouTube Shorts users and 54 percent of UAE users reported that they do not use Instagram Reels.

YouTube reiterated its commitment to regional growth, stating that the introduction of new features reflects its dedication to creators in MENA.

Among these is Veo 3 on Shorts, which can create high-definition videos. Initially, it will be English-first but plans exist to expand to more languages and creators in the future.

The Google-owned platform also plans to broaden the reach of its auto-dubbing feature, currently available to about 51,000 Egyptian creators translating Egyptian Arabic to English — an AI-powered translation tool enabling creators to reach global audiences.

Additionally, YouTube will launch its “Creator Partnerships Hub and Open Call” in 2026 across MENA to help brands streamline collaborations with creators and identify the best fit for their campaigns.

Key consumer trends were also highlighted, including a notable shift in viewer behavior.

A Kantar survey revealed that viewers in and the UAE rank YouTube as their top platform for researching, vetting or making decisions about brands, products or services — outperforming Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, X (Twitter) and Snapchat.

Sixty percent of surveyed Gen Z viewers in and the UAE indicated that they prefer watching video product reviews over reading written content or listening to audio reviews.

“We’re building the future of streaming, commerce and entertainment on YouTube,” Amin said. “MENA is a global force in content creation, and we are just getting started.”