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Guide · 5 min

Running a faceless channel on autopilot

A practical walk-through: from connecting a channel to a series that ships a long-form episode and a wave of shorts on its own.

By longflow

Start with the series, not the video

The unit of work in longflow isn't a single video — it's a series. You define the style, the cast, the narrator's voice, and a cadence. Everything after that is the platform executing that definition on schedule, so the decisions you make once shape every future episode.

Connect channels with revocable access

Link YouTube, TikTok, and Instagram with scoped, revocable tokens. You can disconnect any channel at any time, and every connection change is logged. Nothing is locked in.

Decide how much you want to watch

Run fully hands-off and let episodes publish on cadence, or switch on the approval queue and review each one before it goes live. Most teams start with approvals on, then relax them once they trust the output.

Let the shorts do the distribution

Each long-form run auto-cuts into a dozen-plus cinematic shorts, reframed to 9:16 and captioned, then distributed across platforms. One long-form in, a week of content out — without an editor in the loop.

See a series run itself.

longflow is in private beta — written, animated, narrated, and distributed on a cadence, with frame-accurate sync.

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