thepenmonster

He stood alone at Gjallerbru

  • he him

Stuff? I do it.


This conversation that showed up in my feed on Bluesky shows what I've been trying to get creatives to understand since the AI Art thing lifted its ugly head out of the Big Tech Fever Swamp;

  1. The tech will improve vastly and quickly.

  2. It will become normalized.

  3. The public still won't give a shit about artists. They only care about their entertainment. Pointing out how the AI cobbles together its results means nothing. It didn't even figure into the conversation above and I find they're the norm.

In the internet era artists have been relying on a collection of fickle kidults to keep the rent money coming in. To think they won't be abandoned when something faster and easier comes along is delusional.

Something faster and easier came along. So long.


While I'm at it, there has been a lot of noise in the Geek-o-Sphere about the failure of recent Marvel movies and of the comics market crashing hard.

A lot of dummies have been trying to make it their latest culture war pistol. But they're dummies and barely worth mentioning beyond as a warning to others. Yet even the sane folks can't seem to fathom why the most recent 19 page Spider-Man story or MCU flick didn't sell well.

I'll tell yah why: It wasn't formatted for a phone screen.

Something like 80 ~ 90 percent of their markets use smartphones for every single aspect of their lives. Especially for their entertainment. The smartphone was an extinction level event for traditional media the same way it was for camera companies like Nikon and Canon. Bad box office and shuttering comic shops are only the beginning.

But let's argue about "woke" with some dummies instead.


You must log in to comment.

in reply to @thepenmonster's post:

(gently) calling bullshit on "the tech will improve vastly and quickly"; nothing i've seen actually indicates this to be the case. i've seen too many empty promises to believe the industry hype about it. in fact i'm more convinced of the opposite -- that this (gestures broadly) is the best it is going to get and once people and companies realize its inherent limitations they will drop it like a rock.

however i do empathize with the cynicism of seeing it (attempting to be) normalized and non-artists not really giving a shit about what artists are saying

i will point out that the writer's strike does indicate that creatives have power to dictate how and where """ai""" does get used, at least in the professional domain