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The term 'AI slop' is becoming obsolete as generative video quality rapidly improves. Viral content, like recent World Cup memes, shows a shift from uncanny outputs to genuinely funny and well-crafted content that people actively seek out and share, signaling a new era for creators.
Don't view generative AI video as just a way to make traditional films more efficiently. Ben Horowitz sees it as a fundamentally new creative medium, much like movies were to theater. It enables entirely new forms of storytelling by making visuals that once required massive budgets accessible to anyone.
Traditional meme templates are becoming stale. The new marketing playbook involves creating characters that audiences will be compelled to latch onto and remix using AI video tools. This user-generated content can shift narratives and generate massive, organic awareness for new movies or shows.
The new marketing playbook involves creating "rage bait" characters that communities remix into viral AI-generated videos. This creates fan-made cinematic universes that drive engagement far more effectively than older image-based memes, as seen with the Harry Potter reboot.
The primary value of current AI video tools is not perfection but speed. The host created a full hype video—from avatar creation to final edit—in under 15 minutes. The result was only "50% there," but its immediate utility for social media and marketing outweighed its flaws, showcasing a new paradigm in content creation.
The term "slop" is misattributed to AI. It actually describes any generic, undifferentiated output designed for mass appeal, a problem that existed in human-made media long before LLMs. AI is simply a new tool for scaling its creation.
The negative perception of current AI-generated content ('slop') overlooks its evolutionary nature. Today's low-quality output is a necessary step towards future sophistication and can be a profitable business model, as it represents the 'sloppiest' AI will ever be.
The definition of "AI slop" is evolving from obviously fake images to a flood of perfectly polished, generic, and boring content. As AI makes flattering imagery cheap to produce, authentic, unpolished, and even unflattering content becomes more valuable for creators trying to stand out on platforms like Instagram.
For a generative video model like OpenAI's Sora 2 to achieve viral adoption, it needs a universally appealing, simple-to-execute prompt, much like DALL-E's "Studio Ghibli moment." A feature like "upload your profile picture and turn it into a video" would engage a mass audience far more effectively than just showcasing raw technical capabilities.
The OpenAI team believes generative video won't just create traditional feature films more easily. It will give rise to entirely new mediums and creator classes, much like the film camera created cinema, a medium distinct from the recorded stage plays it was first used for.
Just as photography forced painters to evolve into new forms like Impressionism, the flood of AI content is training consumers to recognize generic output. This raises the standard for quality and places a higher premium on creativity that demonstrates a unique, human touch and even imperfection.