AI-generated media is clearly still in the slop phase, but it's probably not much longer before tooling evolves significantly to allow for fine, creative control with simple prompting or more advanced tools where it is desired once we hit that point, some of the "best" content may actually be AI-generated. the reason being that expensive productions have to appeal to a big, broad, often turbo-normie audience in order to even get produced. the result is, ironically, often quite slop-like whereas small AI-accelerated productions can target niches and take creative risks with story-telling and execution which traditional productions simply can't afford to do this will apply to movie, tv/serial, video game, music, and other formats it doesn't mean all of the transition is positive ofc. we're going to lose certain technical skills (not unlike how there are fewer stone sculptors today and perhaps none of the caliber of the renaissance masters), but also allow many more people to develop significant creative storytelling skills which never would have been expressed otherwise