Samsung and Google are turning a living-room staple into a personal archive and a casual creativity studio. In an announcement timed for the run-up to CES 2026, Samsung said its 2026 AI TV lineup will get deep Google Photos integration early next year — with curated “Memories” slideshows arriving first and on-device Gemini-powered creation tools coming later in 2026. The move is explicitly about making the TV a place to relive and rework family moments, not just a bigger place to watch other people’s content.
The first piece is familiar to anyone who’s used Google Photos on a phone: backed-up images and videos surfaced automatically as narrative slideshows. But on a TV, this becomes an intentionally cinematic experience. Samsung says users who sign in with a Google account will be able to pull their phone backups onto the big screen, where those photos are grouped by people, places and events and surfaced by Samsung’s Vision AI Companion (VAC) on Daily+ and Daily Board surfaces throughout the day. The practical payoff is less fiddly syncing and more serendipitous rediscovery — think a looped slideshow of last summer’s beach trip filling the living room during dinner.
Samsung’s rollout plan is staged. New 2026 TV models will ship with the Google Photos Memories experience built in, and select older Samsung TVs should get the feature via software updates, with the initial “Memories” capability slated for early 2026 and broader creative features arriving in the second half of the year. Samsung’s framing is careful: availability will vary by model, region and OS schedule, and the Memories experience depends on users having Google Photos backups enabled. That timeline makes the feature a near-term differentiator at CES demos and a later product hook for dealers and holiday buyers.
The more novel bit arrives later under a banner Samsung calls “Create with AI.” That toolbox will use Google’s Gemini family — specifically the Nano Banana image-generation/editing tier — to let people remix photo styles, apply themed templates and even animate stills into short clips, all from the couch. The Gemini “Nano Banana” models are already in Google products for quick, creative edits and are designed to run efficiently for on-device or near-device use, which helps explain why Samsung and Google view TVs as a natural next surface. Samsung’s product messaging emphasizes playful, template-driven features: turn a snapshot into a storybook illustration, nudge a photo toward a Renaissance look, or create short motioned clips from static images without pulling out a phone or PC.
That combination — cloud-backed memories plus on-device generative tools — is telling about how both companies now think of the TV. For Samsung, it’s a way to push the TV beyond color, contrast and gaming specs and into everyday household life; for Google, it’s an extension of Photos and Gemini into a new, highly social surface. Samsung’s public statements frame it as a way to “bring to light the stories behind photos” and to make the TV a constant, passive place for family storytelling rather than just a passive entertainment appliance. Google Photos leadership framed the integration as helping people “reconnect with memories in new ways,” language that underscores a product-first rather than platform-first rationale.
There are practical implications worth flagging for readers who care about setup, privacy and value. You’ll need a Google account and Photos backups enabled for the Memories experience to work; the TV acts as a viewer and creative surface, but your media remains in Google’s cloud unless you export it elsewhere. Samsung notes that features vary by model and region matters: buyers should confirm model-year compatibility and update schedules, and expect that some older TVs won’t get the full suite of features. From a consumer point of view, this could be a compelling reason to favor a 2026 Samsung set if you already use Google Photos heavily.
There’s also a business angle. The exclusivity window — Samsung TVs being first to host the full Memories experience and some Nano Banana features — gives Samsung a headline-ready differentiator at CES and during early 2026 retail cycles. For Google, the arrangement extends Photos and Gemini’s reach into homes without requiring users to buy a Pixel phone or a Nest device. For retailers and marketers, Samsung’s message about “creative studio” features could translate into new bundles and holiday push language that leans on personalization rather than just panel tech.
A few open questions remain. How smooth will the privacy controls be when you sign a TV into a Google account? How responsive and polished will the Nano Banana-driven edits look on large, high-resolution screens? And perhaps most importantly for anyone who treats photos as private, how easy will it be to limit which albums surface on a shared family TV? Samsung’s announcements nod at device- and region-dependent limits, but full answers will come once devices are in reviewers’ hands and privacy fine print is published. Until then, the integration looks like a useful push toward making the TV more personal — provided users are comfortable with the cloud connection that enables it.
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