EPISODE · Jul 6, 2026 · 46 MIN
The Rise of AI Will Be Good for the Creative Arts?
from Network Capital · host Network Capital
In 2007, as user-generated content was upending media, Barry Diller declared that "the truth is there isn't that much talent to go around." Big audiences, he insisted, belonged to trained professionals. The two decades since have complicated that claim. YouTube built a creative economy larger than Hollywood's, and it did so by ignoring the gatekeepers Diller defended. Now AI has reopened the argument with sharper edges.This episode stages that argument in full. On one side, the claim that AI dismantles the last remaining barriers. A filmmaker without a studio, a composer without an orchestra, a novelist without an agent can now produce work that once required institutional backing, and the biggest beneficiaries are creators the old system excluded, whether by geography, class, or connection. On the other side, the charge that AI produces slop at industrial scale, that content overload buries good work under infinite mediocre work, and that a technology trained on artists' uncompensated labour cannot plausibly be their liberator. Cheaper tools may widen access while narrowing the odds that anything breaks through.The question underneath is the one Diller raised. Either talent is genuinely rare, in which case flooding the world with tools changes little, or talent was always abundant and merely gatekept, in which case AI is the largest creative enfranchisement in history.
What this episode covers
In 2007, as user-generated content was upending media, Barry Diller declared that "the truth is there isn't that much talent to go around." Big audiences, he insisted, belonged to trained professionals. The two decades since have complicated that claim. YouTube built a creative economy larger than Hollywood's, and it did so by ignoring the gatekeepers Diller defended. Now AI has reopened the argument with sharper edges.This episode stages that argument in full. On one side, the claim that AI dismantles the last remaining barriers. A filmmaker without a studio, a composer without an orchestra, a novelist without an agent can now produce work that once required institutional backing, and the biggest beneficiaries are creators the old system excluded, whether by geography, class, or connection. On the other side, the charge that AI produces slop at industrial scale, that content overload buries good work under infinite mediocre work, and that a technology trained on artists' uncompensated labour cannot plausibly be their liberator. Cheaper tools may widen access while narrowing the odds that anything breaks through.The question underneath is the one Diller raised. Either talent is genuinely rare, in which case flooding the world with tools changes little, or talent was always abundant and merely gatekept, in which case AI is the largest creative enfranchisement in history.
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The Rise of AI Will Be Good for the Creative Arts?
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