Short videos have taken over just about every app we use. You scroll through them on X, lose track of time on Instagram, watch them on YouTube, and now even Netflix has its own bite-sized feed. So when I heard that Google was bringing the format to NotebookLM, it felt both surprising and completely inevitable at the same time.
Google has announced Short Video Overviews for NotebookLM, a feature that turns dense documents and complicated sources into 60-second vertical videos that explain key ideas. Instead of staring at pages of notes, you get a quick visual walkthrough of the concept you’re trying to understand.
Finally, a short video your brain will thank you for
Introducing this feature feels like one of those ideas where you wonder, “Why didn’t this exist sooner?” I’ve always found that if a concept is explained visually, it sticks with me much better than reading the same paragraph three or four times. If I had NotebookLM back when I was working on my university psychology thesis, I would’ve happily watched a handful of one-minute videos instead of digging through dozens of pages every time I needed a refresher.
That thought became even more real when I showed it to my nephew. He’s enjoying his school holidays right now, but next week he walks back into class and straight into a test. Over the last few days, he’s been looking at his pile of notes and growing increasingly anxious about how he’ll finish revising everything. So I asked him, “Why don’t you upload your notes to NotebookLM and see if it can explain them back to you as short videos?” You could almost see the stress ease a little. Suddenly, revision felt approachable. It’s obviously too early to say whether it’ll improve his grades; the feature has only just rolled out, but if it can help him understand a topic faster and make studying feel less overwhelming, that’s already a win.
The more I thought about it, the more I realized this isn’t just a feature for students. I can already imagine creators getting a lot out of it too. Anyone making educational or faceless content spends hours turning research papers, PDFs, reports, or long notes into something people will actually watch. If NotebookLM can handle the first draft of that process by creating a concise visual overview, that’s a lot of time saved.
And honestly, it also feels like a nice twist on our collective obsession with short videos. We’re already spending hours flicking through vertical videos every day — I’m definitely guilty of it. So much so, I’m probably the last person who should be preaching about avoiding doomscrolling, but if I’m going to keep watching short videos anyway, I’d much rather a few of them actually make me smarter.
We’ve officially optimized our brains for 60 seconds
As excited as I am about this feature, it also left me with a slightly uncomfortable thought. The reason I instantly liked it is probably the same reason it exists in the first place: my attention span just isn’t what it used to be. So when Google says it can turn dense notes into a 60-second video, my first reaction is, “Honestly, I’d use that.” The funny part is that this feature is solving a problem we’ve slowly created for ourselves. We’ve trained our brains to expect information in bite-sized pieces, and now we’re building tools that fit how we consume content. It’s a little ironic, if you think about it.

That said, I’d still call this a net positive. If those same 60 seconds that I would’ve spent mindlessly scrolling can instead help me understand a concept, revise a chapter, or finally make sense of something I’ve been putting off, I’ll happily take that trade.
Not in the club yet? You won’t be waiting long
Google is rolling out Short Video Overviews to NotebookLM AI Pro and AI Ultra subscribers on both mobile and the web, and thankfully, I was able to try it early. After spending some time with it, I can already see myself using it far more often than I expected.

There are a couple of limitations for now, though. The feature currently works only with English-language sources, so if your notes or documents are in another language, you’ll have to wait a little longer. The good news is that Google will likely expand language support over time, just as it has with many of its other AI features.
And if you’re a free NotebookLM user, don’t worry — you haven’t been left out. Google has confirmed that this feature will be available to free users soon. So even if you can’t try it today, it probably won’t be long before you’re turning your own notes into bite-sized lessons too.