The ‘rebellious’ instincts that turned Synthesia CEO Victor Riparbelli into a generative‑AI trailblazer

The ‘rebellious’ instincts that turned Synthesia CEO Victor Riparbelli into a generative‑AI trailblazer


Victor Riparbelli, co-founder and CEO of Synthesia, has become one of Europe’s leading voices on AI — despite starting far from the traditional tech path. 

Growing up in Denmark, Riparbelli often felt out of step with its consensus-driven culture.  

“It’s an amazing place, but it’s really not a place that inspires ambition and drive and innovation,” he told CNBC’s Steve Sedgwick on the “Executive Decisions” podcast.

He immersed himself in books and computers, developing what he calls a “rebellious” mindset and a knack for spotting trends early.

Riparbelli’s ambitions took him abroad for a semester at Stanford University and eventually London’s startup scene, where he came across the groundbreaking research paper, “Face-to-Face.”

“This is one of the first papers [on artificial intelligence] that used the neural network to actually generate new data, and in this case, video of people talking, which looked pretty realistic,” Riparbelli said. 

Describing it as a moment of epiphany, the idea sparked the company that would become Synthesia. But convincing investors was tough at first. 

“We tried a lot of people, more than 100 people. We got turned down by most of them,” Riparbelli said. 

The turning point came from a cold email to billionaire entrepreneur Mark Cuban, who invested $1 million after a 14‑hour exchange. Riparbelli says the experience underscored just how critical buy‑in is when you’re pitching an unconventional idea.

“If you have to both convince them on the vision and that you’re the right person to tackle it, it’s very difficult,” he said. 

With Synthesia most recently valued at $4 billion, Riparbelli has big decisions ahead as the company prepares for its next chapter.

“Our aspirations are very, very big. Getting to a billion dollars in revenue… probably requires us to go multi-product,” he said.

Watch Victor Riparbelli’s interview with Steve Sedgwick by clicking the video above, and subscribe to Executive Decisions wherever you get your podcasts. 



Source

Forget DeepSeek. China’s already released 5 new AI models and UBS prefers this one
World

Forget DeepSeek. China’s already released 5 new AI models and UBS prefers this one

As speculation over a new version of the DeepSeek AI model grows, several other Chinese tech companies have released their own generative artificial intelligence models in the past few weeks. They range from Alibaba’s Qwen 3.5 to ByteDance’s video-generating Seedance 2.0. But what’s caught the eye of AI users — and UBS stock analysts — […]

Read More
0 oil? Prolonged Hormuz closure could spark a 1970s-style energy shock
World

$100 oil? Prolonged Hormuz closure could spark a 1970s-style energy shock

Tankers are seen at the Khor Fakkan Container Terminal, the only natural deep-sea port in the region and one of the major container ports in the Sharjah Emirate, along the Strait of Hormuz, a waterway through which one-fifth of global oil output passes on June 23, 2025. Giuseppe Cacace | AFP | Getty Images Oil […]

Read More
U.S.-Israel strikes Iran: What we know as markets brace for turmoil
World

U.S.-Israel strikes Iran: What we know as markets brace for turmoil

JERUSALEM – FEBRUARY 28: People take shelter as Iran launched missiles and drones towards Israel following the US-Israeli attacks, in Jerusalem on February 28, 2026. Mostafa Alkharouf | Anadolu | Getty Images The U.S. and Israel launched their most aggressive attack ever on Iranian targets over the weekend that killed the Islamic state’s longtime supreme […]

Read More