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discuss Why AI Will Replace Most Artists, Musicians, and Content Writers: HOPEFULLY NOT

A thread covering the latest news on trends, groundbreaking technologies, and digital innovations reshaping the tech landscape.
You feel it already, don’t you?

You’re working twice as hard—more research, more hours, more strategy. Your content is better than ever. Yet instead of growing, you’re stagnating—or worse, losing ground.

You push harder just to hit the numbers that came easily two years ago.

And you’re not alone.

Ask any independent creator—YouTubers, writers, graphic designers, TikTokers, musicians, voice actors, authors—and they’ll all tell you the same thing:

“It’s just harder now.”

They’ll blame oversaturation. They’ll blame the algorithm. They’ll blame the market, inflation, politics—anything but the truth.

Not because they don’t know it. Because they don’t want to face it.

What is that truth?

AI is taking over independent content creation—not some of it, all of it. And it’s not happening slowly.

The Proof: AI Is Consuming Independent Content Creation​

It’s not speculation. It’s not a future problem. It’s happening right now. AI isn’t just changing content creation—it’s reshaping the entire landscape. Its speed and efficiency are impacting every industry that relies on creative work.

Let’s look at the evidence.

1. YouTube: AI Channels Are Outpacing Human Creators​

  • AI-generated YouTube channels are flooding the platform, producing dozens of videos per day while human creators struggle to make one per week.
  • Fully AI-generated faceless channels—using AI for scripting, voiceovers, animation, and thumbnails—are racking up millions of views at a fraction of the effort.
  • In 2023, MrBeast, one of the biggest YouTubers in the world, warned that AI-generated content will replace most faceless creators within five years (X/Twitter, 2023).
Real Case Examples:

Companies like InVideo and AutoShorts are accelerating the shift toward AI-generated YouTube content, offering powerful tools that automate every aspect of video production. These platforms allow users to generate scripts, voiceovers, visuals, and even full-length videos with minimal manual effort—significantly reducing the time and cost of content creation.

A 2024 Business Insider report highlighted how these AI-driven tools are enabling individuals to produce and monetize videos at an unprecedented scale, flooding the platform with AI-generated content that competes directly with human creators. Unlike traditional YouTube channels that require weeks of scripting, filming, and editing, AI-powered channels can produce and upload dozens of videos per day, dominating algorithmic visibility and engagement.

2. Writing: AI Content Is Saturating Blogs and Books​

  • AI-generated blog content is flooding the internet, outpacing human writers at an unsustainable rate. Google has confirmed that AI-written articles are ranking in search results, meaning SEO-driven blogging is already being automated away (Google Search Central, 2023).
  • Amazon’s Kindle marketplace is being overwhelmed with AI-generated books, forcing human authors to compete against mass-produced, zero-effort content (Reuters, 2023).
  • In response, Amazon introduced AI disclosure policies, requiring authors to label AI-generated content—a clear sign that the problem has already spiraled out of control (Amazon KDP, 2023).




3. Art & Graphic Design: AI Is Outproducing Human Artists​

  • AI-generated artwork is flooding the market, undercutting human artists at an alarming rate. Tools like MidJourney and Stable Diffusion can generate high-quality images in seconds—eliminating the need for expensive commissioned work.
  • Major companies are already replacing human illustrators with AI-generated art. In 2023, Netflix Japan released an animated short titled The Dog & The Boy, which featured AI-generated backgrounds, explicitly stating that the decision was made to avoid hiring human artists (Netflix Japan, 2023).
  • Stock image sites are now accepting AI-generated submissions, leading to a surge of mass-produced, low-effort AI artwork that devalues original human creations.
Real Case Examples:

The reality is that today, AI can generate detailed, stylized artwork in a matter of seconds—and clients are taking notice. Businesses and content creators who once relied on commissioned illustrators are now turning to AI art tools that can produce professional-quality images instantly and at little to no cost.

The commercialization of AI-generated art is already impacting professional artists. In 2022, an AI-generated piece titled “Théâtre D’opéra Spatial” sparked controversy when it won first place in the Colorado State Fair’s digital art competition—beating human artists in a judged event (The Verge, 2022). The winning artwork was created using MidJourney, raising concerns over whether AI-generated pieces should be allowed to compete against human-created works.


The trend is clear: AI isn’t just a tool for assisting artists—it’s replacing them. As AI-generated art continues to refine its ability to replicate human creativity, the distinction between handcrafted artistry and machine-generated images will blur. Art is no longer the sole domain of human vision and skill—AI is now the artist itself.

4. Music & Voice Acting: AI Is Dismantling the Industry​

  • AI-generated music is now so realistic that entire albums are being created without human artists. AI tools can generate fully produced songs—including lyrics, vocals, and instrumentals—without any human involvement.
  • AI voice cloning is advancing so rapidly that video game studios are replacing professional voice actors with AI-generated performances. Instead of hiring new talent, companies are opting for AI-generated voices that can be adjusted, re-recorded, and localized instantly (Kotaku, 2023).
  • Streaming platforms are struggling to manage an influx of AI-generated songs, making it increasingly difficult for real musicians to stand out in an oversaturated market.
Real Case Examples:

With AI now able to replicate vocal styles and compose music with near-human precision, the industry is undergoing a fundamental shift—one that is forcing musicians and voice actors to compete against flawless, infinitely scalable AI-generated performances.

But it’s not just music. AI voice cloning is rapidly changing the gaming and entertainment industries as well. In 2023, multiple game studios quietly began replacing professional voice actors with AI-generated performances—a move that allows companies to cut costs and avoid contractual obligations (Kotaku, 2023). AI voice models can generate, modify, and translate lines on demand, eliminating the need for lengthy recording sessions. While some companies frame this shift as a way to enhance production efficiency, many voice actors see it as a direct threat to their livelihoods.

5. The Final Blow: AI Is Getting Better Every Day​

What makes this different from past technological shifts? Speed, scale, and scope.

Unlike the transition from radio to TV or newspapers to digital media, AI isn’t just replacing a format—it’s replacing human effort itself.
And it’s doing so at an exponential rate.

  • AI writing models are already outperforming most entry-level freelancers.
  • AI video content is advancing faster than anyone predicted.
  • AI voice models are already replacing voice actors in gaming and animation.
Independent content creators are no longer just competing with each other. They are competing with an intelligence that never sleeps, never tires, and never stops improving.

But this isn’t just technological progress. It isn’t just another industrial shift.

The Road Ahead
While the responses to AI’s incursion into creative spaces take positive steps to preserve the livelihood of independent creators, they are all reactionary—they didn’t emerge until the problem was already too big to ignore. This means they are already fighting from behind.

This is what happens when people are blind to the Will to Power.

Because of this ignorance, the measures taken to protect individual creators are not strategic, but desperate—more like throwing darts at a board than delivering a precision strike. After all, how can you guard against something you don’t fully understand?

AI may be the “how” of this disruption, but the Will to Power is the “why.” AI is not an isolated disruption—it is the latest, most visible manifestation of a force that has always shaped competition, evolution, and survival. Those who fail to see this will remain stuck in reaction mode, forever trying to recover from the next wave of refinement.

The content creators who study and understand the Will to Power will be the ones who navigate and survive in the new creative landscape.

Instead of blindly reacting, they will know where to direct their energy and why their actions will be effective. Those who fail to see it will continue to chase trends, trying to figure out what they’re doing wrong—until they are inevitably refined out of existence.

Those who grasp its patterns will see what’s coming before it hits them, and they’ll move with refinement instead of being crushed by it.

Source: https://thereasonforeverything.com/...t-creators-will-not-survive-the-next-5-years/
 
AI has really taken over and has swept content underneath our feet. It’s somewhat killing creativity because we tend to look for easy ways to generate content. Undoubtedly, it has flooded content creation, even in the music world. On the other hand, AI has been a game changer and it's making things much easier if it is practiced and used in a decent way, which it was originally meant for. To augment human creativity and not replace them.
 
I am a writer, I put a lot of effort to write but I see a lot of people using AI and making money as a writer. But I tell myself that this is passing phase and ultimately I will succeed and the ones who use AI will perish. I am not sure whether this will happen or not but what I am sure of is creative people needs to adapt to AI trends and use Generative AI to improve work flow instead of cry over spilled milk.
 
Most people might not agree with this but I believe that AI might replace jobs. It is not all about the emotional depth or personal experience, AI has the capacity to process and analyze huge amounts of data in the blink of an eye and create content that could spark engagement. This is already happening in music and in writing space. We just have to look for what we can do that AI can't replicate.
 
I am a musician and there are aspects of music that AI can't do. There are distinct sounds that you have to play a musical equipment to be able to get. And you can't get AI to do those kinds of sounds that combine unusual instruments and elements.
 
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