While AI can create personalized films, humans fundamentally crave shared experiences that act as social 'Schelling points' for discussion. The value of watching the same movie or attending the same concert as others will limit the appeal of infinitely customized content, which offers no common ground for connection.
Creators will deploy AI avatars, or 'U-Bots,' trained on their personalities to engage in individual, long-term conversations with their entire audience. These bots will remember shared experiences, fostering a deep, personal connection with millions of fans simultaneously—a scale previously unattainable.
Ben Thompson argues that ChatGPT succeeded because the creator was also the consumer, receiving immediate, personalized value. In contrast, AI video is created for an audience. He questions whether Sora's easily-made content is compelling enough for anyone other than the creator to watch, posing a major consumption hurdle.
As AI drives the marginal cost of digital content to zero, unique, in-person events become increasingly valuable. This is a strategic bet on the enduring human need for social connection and status, which cannot be digitally replicated. Value shifts from the digital to the physical.
We are months away from AI that can create a media feed designed to exclusively validate a user's worldview while ignoring all contradictory information. This will intensify confirmation bias to an extreme, making rational debate impossible as individuals inhabit completely separate, self-reinforced realities with no common ground or shared facts.
The next wave of consumer AI will shift from individual productivity to fostering connectivity. AI agents will facilitate interactions between people, helping them understand each other better and addressing the core human need to 'be seen,' creating new social dynamics.
In a world saturated with AI, authentic human connection and community will become even more crucial. Shared, in-person experiences, like watching a football game with friends, offer a level of fulfillment that technology cannot replicate, making community a key area of future value.
As AI generates vast amounts of generic content, brands that showcase genuine human stories, empathy, and creativity will build stronger connections and trust that technology cannot replicate.
As AI-generated content creates a sea of sameness, audiences will seek what machines cannot replicate: genuine emotion and deep, personal narrative. This will drive a creator-led shift toward more meaningful, long-form content that offers a real human connection.
Sam Altman argues that even a superhuman AI host would likely not be more popular than a human one. Our deep, biological obsession with other people—their stories, flaws, and shared experiences—ensures that being a "real person" will increase in value in a world of unlimited AI content.
As AI-powered recommendation engines become ubiquitous, there is a growing appreciation for human-curated content. Services that feature long-form, human-led sessions, like DJ sets on YouTube, offer an authentic experience that users are starting to prefer over purely algorithmic playlists.