I do voice acting and made a bunch of characters like Simpson or family show but audio only, I don't have the time to edit or turn it into video but with AI video I will soon be able to bring My audio only show into a video show. When I first did My audio show I imagined the scene and what the characters look like and what they will do, so that will be in the prompt.
1 month ago | 1
AI content is ruining what Youtube was originally all about. Genuine people making genuine content. Now everything is overly produced and AI generated clips and videos has completely ruined the experience.
1 month ago | 9
Much rather see real humans, warts and all ….even the mistakes and the amateur moments than perfect, polished perfection . At least the ts real 😊
1 month ago
| 3
I’ve seen some extraordinarily incredible AI videos that were filled with artistry. Watching well made videos like that are encouraging to me as a viewer. My concern lies in people creating AI deception in say, news reporting, false advertising, propaganda, medicine, finances, weather, natural disasters, etc.
1 month ago
| 1
AI-generated videos are difficult to connect with on a personal level. I always feel distanced by them and never fully engaged, no matter how useful the information in the video might be. This reminds me of back in the late 1990s and early 2000s when I was working as a visual effects artist at Industrial Light & Magic. The industry (meaning the studios) thought that CG effects and CG creatures were the be-all end-all thing, that practical (as in physical) effects were going the way of the dinosaur. We in the VFX houses knew that wasn't exactly the case. It didn't take long for audiences to become savvy to CGI and become put off by it. They weren't connecting with it. After a few years, practical effects (miniatures, models, puppets, special effects makeup, etc.) made a comeback. Now, we often see a blend of physical effects and digital effects. One way that AI-generated videos can be off-putting is something known as "the uncanny valley". This is where the imagery straddles the line between being realistic and artificial. It can almost feel real, but is lacking something (I'll call it soul), and that can be disturbing to the human mind and can foster on subconscious mistrust. This is why animated, cartoonish AI-generated imagery is more widely accepted since we already know, by virtue of being a cartoon, it's not real. Just my 2 cents.
1 month ago | 3
People need to understand it's a tool to help creatives and production. Not a replacement for it. I think it's also important for everyone to know that it's coming in a big way and ways we can't even guess right now whether we want it to or not.
1 month ago | 2
I don’t plan on using AI for any of my YouTube shorts/long form at the moment. I think siding with authenticity for my content will be much more desirable in the long run. It’s such a new thing, I think we will eventually figure out where it has its place, but for now I won’t be using it to “enhance” my videos. Thx 😊
1 month ago (edited) | 1
I like AI if it is fantasy, but not about realistic topics like finance, science, cars etc.
1 month ago | 0
I cringe at things like what Mr. Beast does. And some of the clickbait titles and content of so-called genuine YouTube creators. I find some of the documentaries on YouTube are good, and in fact are using AI for narration. I bet a lot of people have no idea that it’s AI though.
1 month ago
| 1
AI is incredible for speeding up the research process. Of course, it’s still important to cross-check all the information because, as creators, we have a responsibility to be accurate and accountable for what we share on our channels. But what used to take hours of digging can now be at your fingertips in minutes. It’s really no different than how the internet replaced encyclopedias as our go-to source for information. The real issue isn’t AI itself—it’s how people use it. Those who don’t fact-check before publishing are the problem, not the technology. Resist it or embrace it, AI isn’t going away, Personally, I find it super helpful not just for research, but for organizing video outlines, brainstorming ideas, and improving flow and delivery. It’s a powerful assistant if used wisely... and viewed as a tool.
2 weeks ago | 0
I caught one video where I recognized another YouTubers clip just by her hands! I told her about it and sent screenshots by email. She notified the “creator” and basically was told off. It’s happening again on TT and they are considering legal action.
1 month ago | 0
AI can be a powerful tool and make small creators feel like they have a production team. The problem comes when creators outsource the majority of the creative process. It cheapens videos on YouTube, steals views from people who are doing the honest, creative work, and runs the risk of making everything feel the same.
1 month ago | 0
I can accept its existence as inevitable but content hosts need to take the steps to detect and label what is AI creation and give users the means to filter it out of our feeds if we want to. AI should be rejected if it is posing as real and we need the ability as users to send the message that we will not tolerate being forced to consume it.
1 month ago (edited) | 0
For me, I'm fine with entertainment shorts being AI. However, with long form, I've never liked computer generated voices on faceless videos. I'd much rather hear from a person than a fake voice. Even if the person might be reading directly from an AI script. I'm just weird like that
1 month ago (edited) | 0
Everyone watches ai once, then stop, that's what I think happens, because that's what I do, I saw it once then I just scroll fast, avoid it.
1 month ago | 0
I feel we all need to push for labeling of content. I've seen some channels doing it themselves. It’s awful to go into a video and find yourself listening to the boring and soul-less words of AI and especially when it's even AI voice. Not a fan but some are. We all need to begin to label the videos "no AI"
1 month ago
| 0
That it is just an extra tool in your toolbox. It's not to replace you. It's like gps on a bulldozer, it can run the dozer for you or do the techanicial stuff it can just help you chase grade. AI has its issues and I'm finding that out daily.
1 month ago
| 0
We watch videos to digest the content from a proficient living creator not an artificial one. The problem is knowing the difference. If I think it's AI then I stop watching immediately. I write music and I don't want anything to do with it as it is crippling real talent and creating a bad feeling amongst musicians.
1 month ago
| 0
Brian G Johnson TV
I ran a poll recently and over 75% of you said you’re not comfortable watching AI-made videos.
That really shows how divided things are right now, I honestly feel the same mix of curiosity and concern.
I’m probably going to talk about this more in my next video, and I’d love your feedback to help shape it.
What do you think people most need to hear about AI and where we’re at right now?
1 month ago | [YT] | 45