An Israeli TV reporter lost his ability to speak clearly. AI is helping 
		him get back on air
		
		 
		Send a link to a friend  
 
		
		
		 [January 08, 2025] 
		By MELANIE LIDMAN 
		
		JERUSALEM (AP) — When a renowned Israeli TV journalist lost his ability 
		to speak clearly because of ALS, he thought his career might be over. 
		But now, using artificial-intelligence software that can recreate his 
		widely recognized gravelly voice, Moshe Nussbaum — known to generations 
		of viewers simply as “Nussi” — is making a comeback. 
		 
		Nussbaum, 71, was diagnosed two years ago with amyotrophic lateral 
		sclerosis, a progressive disease also known as Lou Gehrig’s disease that 
		attacks nerve cells that control muscles throughout the body. 
		 
		At the time, he vowed to viewers of Israel's Channel 12 News to continue 
		working as long as he was physically able. But, gradually, it became 
		more and more difficult. 
		 
		It was a devastating blow to the career of a leading, no-nonsense 
		reporter who for more than 40 years had covered many of Israel’s most 
		important stories from the field. He had appeared from the scenes of 
		suicide bombing attacks and the front lines of wars in Gaza and Lebanon, 
		and had covered scandals in Israel’s parliament and high-profile court 
		cases. 
		 
		After Hamas' Oct. 7, 2023, attack that triggered the war in Gaza, 
		Nussbaum was unable to report from the field. It was the first war of 
		his career he had ever sat out, he noted in a recent interview with 
		colleagues at Channel 12, the country's largest station. 
		 
		Even though he was having trouble moving and speaking, he launched a 
		segment interviewing injured soldiers from Israeli hospitals. His 
		questions were slow and halting, but he kept it up for the first half of 
		the war. Then, as it became increasingly difficult to speak, and to be 
		understood, his interviews became less frequent. 
		
		
		  
		
		On Monday, Channel 12 made the surprising announcement that it would 
		bring Nussbaum back to the air in the coming weeks as a commentator— 
		with the help of AI. 
		 
		“It took me a few moments to absorb it and to understand that it is me 
		speaking now,” Nussbaum told The Associated Press via text message. 
		“Slowly, slowly, I’m understanding the incredible meaning of this device 
		for everyone with disabilities, including me.” 
		 
		Nussbaum will report his stories, and then write them up, using an AI 
		program that has been trained to speak using Nussbaum’s voice. He will 
		be filmed as if he were presenting, and his lips will be 
		“technologically adjusted” to match the words. 
		 
		People with speech disorders have used traditional text-to-speech 
		technology for years, but those voices sound robotic and flat, and lack 
		emotion. In contrast, AI technology is trained using recordings of a 
		person’s voice — there are thousands of hours of Nussbaum speaking 
		thanks to his lengthy career in TV and radio — and it can mimic their 
		intonations and phrasing. 
		
		Thrilled by the possibilities the technology affords him, Nussbaum said 
		he is also worried about the ease with which the technology could be 
		used by bad actors to spread fake news and falsehoods. 
		 
		[to top of second column] 
			 | 
            
             
            
			  
            In this frame grab taken from video provided by CHANNEL 12 NEWS, 
			Israeli journalist Moshe Nussbaum whose speech is impaired due to 
			ALS (amyotrophic lateral sclerosis), talks in a studio, Neve Ilan, 
			Israel, on Dec. 28, 2024. (CHANNEL 12 NEWS via AP) 
            
			
			
			  In its current form, the technology 
			will not work for live broadcasts, so Nussbaum won't be able to go 
			out into the field, which is his favorite part of the job, he said. 
			Instead, he will focus on commentary and analysis about crime and 
			national security, his areas of expertise for decades. 
			 
			Ahead of the broadcasts, Channel 12 released a preview showing 
			snippets of Nussbaum speaking naturally — garbled and difficult to 
			understand — followed by the new “Nussi AI.” The new version sounds 
			strikingly like the old Nussbaum, speaking quickly and emphatically. 
			Nussbaum was filmed as if he was presenting the report, sitting 
			straight with his trademark bushy eyebrows moving up and down for 
			emphasis. 
			 
			“Honestly, this is my first time sitting here in the studio after 
			more than a year,” AI Nussbaum says in the preview. “It feels a bit 
			strange, and mostly, it tugs my heart.” 
			 
			AI-powered voice cloning has grown exponentially in recent years. 
			Experts have warned that the technology can amplify phone scams, 
			disrupt democratic elections and violate the dignity of people — 
			living or dead — who never consented to having their voice recreated 
			to say things they never said. 
			 
			It’s been used to produce deepfake robocalls mimicking President Joe 
			Biden. In the U.S., authorities recently charged a high school 
			athletic director with using AI to generate a fake audio clip of the 
			school’s principal making racist remarks. 
			 
			But the technology also has tremendous potential to help people who 
			have lost their ability to speak clearly. A U.S. congresswoman who 
			cannot speak due to complications from Parkinson’s and a related 
			palsy has used a similar AI program to give a speech on the House 
			floor, and the technology has also helped a young woman who lost her 
			voice due to a tumor. 
			 
			Channel 12 declined to say which AI program it was using. 
			 
			Nussbaum had worried that ALS would rob him of the career he loved. 
			In an interview with Channel 12, he recounted telling his managers 
			“don’t feel like you’re pitying me, doing me a favor," he said. "The 
			day you come to the conclusion that this is it — tell me. I’ll know 
			how to accept it without a problem.” 
			 
			He calls his new AI-enabled persona a “magic trick” that enabled his 
			comeback, and believes it will raise awareness in Israel of ways 
			that people with disabilities — especially progressive disabilities 
			— can continue to work. 
			 
			“The fact that Channel 12 and my news managers are allowing me to 
			reinvent myself anew, that is one of the most important medicines I 
			can get in my fight with this disease,” he said. 
			
			
			All contents © copyright 2024 Associated Press. All rights reserved  |