The BRIDGE Summit 2025 opened on Monday at the Abu Dhabi National Exhibition Centre (ADNEC), marking the launch of what is being described as the world’s largest gathering for the media, content, and entertainment industries.
Running from December 8-10, the event brings together more than 60,000 participants from across the globe, including creators, policymakers, technologists, investors, and industry executives.
More than 400 international speakers and 300 exhibitors are taking part, with activity spread across ADNEC’s 1.65-million-square-foot venue. The Summit’s programme spans over 300 sessions, including 200 panel discussions and 50 workshops, and covers seven major content themes: media, the creator economy, technology, gaming, music, marketing, and visual production.
A major highlight of day one was the appearance of actor, filmmaker, and entrepreneur Idris Elba, who delivered a keynote stressing the importance of supporting underrepresented creative communities worldwide. Elba spoke about building sustainable creative infrastructure, especially in regions where talent is abundant but opportunity remains limited.
Discussions throughout the opening day focused heavily on the global expansion of the entertainment and media sector, which generated an estimated $2.8 trillion in economic activity last year. Speakers examined the rapidly evolving landscape of content creation, distribution, and monetisation, as well as the growing influence of digital platforms.
Technology, particularly artificial intelligence, dominated many sessions, with thought leaders addressing both its potential and its challenges. Experts, including H.E. Omar Sultan Al Olama, the UAE Minister of State for Artificial Intelligence, Digital Economy and Remote Work Applications, highlighted AI’s increasing role in automating production, personalising content, and reshaping audience engagement, while raising questions about authenticity, authorship, and public trust.
Organisers emphasised that the BRIDGE Summit is designed not only as a conference but as a global ecosystem - a place where creators, investors, and media institutions can form partnerships, exchange ideas, and drive new industry initiatives. By hosting the event, Abu Dhabi aims to cement its position as a rising global hub for media and creative industries.
Over the next two days, the focus will shift toward deal-making, emerging technologies, next-generation content formats, and new cross-sector partnerships that could shape the future of the global creative economy.

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