The Guardian (USA)

AI not ‘messy’ enough to replace creative people, Charlie Brooker says

- Kelly Burke

Artificial intelligen­ce is unlikely ever to rival the depth of human creativity, according to Charlie Brooker, because AI is just not messy enough.

The creator of Black Mirror admitted that he initially experience­d a surge of emotion akin to panic and despair when he instructed ChatGPT to write an episode of his Channel Four/Netflix hit television series, known for its dark and often darkly humorous exploratio­n of emerging and future technology.

“I said to ChatGPT, ‘Go give me an outline for a Black Mirror story,’” he told a capacity crowd at an Internatio­nal Convention Centre SXSW event in Sydney on Wednesday.

“And as it’s coming through in the first couple of sentences you feel a cold spike of fear, like animal terror.

“Like I’m being fucking replaced. I’m not even gonna see what it does. I’m gonna jump out the fucking window.” The paranoia was short-lived.

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“Then as it carries on you go, ‘Oh this is boring. I was frightened a sec ago, now I’m bored because this is so derivative.’

“It’s just emulating something. It’s Hoovered up every descriptio­n of every Black Mirror episode, presumably from Wikipedia and other things that people have written, and it’s just sort of vomiting that back at me. It’s pretending to be something it isn’t capable of being.”

AI is here to stay and can be a very powerful tool, Brooker told his audience.

“But I can’t quite see it replacing messy people,” he said of the AI chatbot and its limited capacity to generate imaginativ­e storylines and ingenious plot twists.

Black Mirror’s 27 episodes and one interactiv­e film, spread across six seasons, have collected three Emmys for outstandin­g television movie over the past decade. The series is widely placed among Netflix’s Top 10 of all time, with IMDb users ranking it seventh overall – outranking both House of Cards and The Crown.

But Brooker has also been accused of watering down the show’s sinister or bleak themes, after Netflix bought the series from Channel 4 after the second season and marketed it to a more commercial audience.

Brooker raised the accusation himself at the SXSW event.

“One of the criticisms we sometimes get is, ‘I prefer the show when it was British and everyone in it was miserable and everything smelled a little bit of shit and all the stories were horrible,’” the 52-year-old Berkshire-born director and writer said.

“And then it’s gone to Netflix and suddenly everything’s sunny and happy and everyone has wonderful teeth, and it’s full of Hollywood stars and it’s lost that edge.”

Brooker said he understood and accepted the criticism, and admitted that when he had first started doing business in the US “everyone expected me to be like the Unabomber”. But he in

 ?? ?? Charlie Brooker during his keynote session at SXSW Sydney. Photograph: Brendon Thorne/Getty Images for SXSW Sydney
Charlie Brooker during his keynote session at SXSW Sydney. Photograph: Brendon Thorne/Getty Images for SXSW Sydney

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