Google just gave video editors the ability to talk to their timelines. The company’s new Gemini Omni Flash model, unveiled on June 30, now lives inside Adobe Firefly, letting creators edit video using plain English text prompts instead of manually scrubbing through frame-by-frame adjustments.

Here’s the thing: this isn’t just a shiny tech demo. It’s a $0.10-per-second pricing model that could reshape how content gets made across every industry that touches digital media, including the increasingly visual world of crypto marketing, NFT art, and decentralized creator economies.

What Gemini Omni Flash actually does

The model handles multimodal inputs, meaning it can process text, images, and video simultaneously. In English: you can feed it a rough clip, type “swap the character’s outfit to a red jacket and make the lighting warmer,” and the AI handles the rest.

Tasks like character swaps, style transfers, and scene relighting are all on the menu. The system maintains audio and visual consistency throughout, which is the part that historically trips up generative video tools.