(9 Jan 2026)
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Las Vegas, US - 7 January 2026
1. Tilt up of woman using Prinker POP, an interactive kiosk that uses AI to analyze users’ skin, eye and hair colors to generate a personalized makeup palette, Prinker POP CEO Luke Yun explaining the machine
2. Close of woman’s image on screen
3. Close of Yun
4. Mid of machine selecting woman’s best colors
5. Tilt down of screen, woman making choice of design for palette
6. Various of screen indicating progress of palette generation
7. Pan from machine to woman
8. Palette coming out of machine
9. Close of woman holding palette
10. SOUNDBITE (English) Luke Yun, CEO, Prinker POP:
"This one is for the business customer, the vending machine. So we are going to set up this kiosk collaborating with shopping malls, and beauty salons like Sephora and Walmart. And then the audience and the customers can drop by the booth and then have fun, which color would be the best for me? And then they can look around the design, the colors, whatever they want, and then they can purchase a single use, or two or three time use palette tray.”
11. Demonstrator using Perfect Corp’s AI Beauty Agent device, taking photo of face
12. Beauty Agent analyzing skin
13. Tilt up of demonstrator using device
14. Close of finger touching ‘Recommendation’ button
15. Close of finger scrolling through scores for different aspects of skin quality
16. Tilt down of machine showing recommended products after analysis
17. Various of demonstrator talking to Wayne Liu, co-founder, Perfect Corp
18. SOUNDBITE (English) Wayne Liu, co-founder, Perfect Corp:
"The disconnect, the gap of ChatGPT is they cannot see you. But in our technology, that's our core technology. We can see you, we analyze your faces, we divide your faces into 4,000 matches so we can analyze it and then we are using 90,000 data points to train our engine to analyze your skin. So ChatGPT could do very generic question/answer, but if you want to go very deep to answer really like a beauty expert, that's where our software is getting the value.”
19. Various of demonstrator using Beauty Agent to see how different make up shaded and designs will look on her
ASSOCIATED PRESS
New York, US - 8 January 2026
++VIDEO CALL++
20. SOUNDBITE (English) Charles Lindsey, Associate Professor of Marketing, University of Buffalo:
"These devices are collecting very large amounts of very personalized data with respect to one's skin and facial scanning one's face. So, different biomarkers and different biometrics - and lots of them, in just a second. And so that does then have implications for security. How is the data being stored? Is it properly encrypted? It has implications for sharing and usage. How is that data being used?"
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Las Vegas, US - 7 January 2026
21. Various of iNewMe booth
22. Various of demonstrator applying sunscreen to cheek
23. Tilt up of demonstrator looking into PIPPI UV mirror
24. Various of device highlighting which areas of skin have been covered in sunscreen
25. Various of Andy Chen, CEO, iNewMe, holding PIPPI UV mirror
26. SOUNDBITE (English) Andy Chen, CEO, iNewMe:
"I think the technology about this mirror regarding the sunscreen detection is that we built-in a UV camera here, which can sense the light under 400 nanometers. So unlike the other RGB cameras, we spent a lot of effort to invent the UV camera, which can help you to detect the UV light.”
27. Various of model entering INNOVÉ Beauty and Wellness spray booth
28. Close of control panel
29. Various of model being sprayed with skincare product mist
ASSOCIATED PRESS
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