clay: extract claims from 2025-07-01-emarketer-consumers-rejecting-ai-creator-content.md
- Source: inbox/archive/2025-07-01-emarketer-consumers-rejecting-ai-creator-content.md - Domain: entertainment - Extracted by: headless extraction cron Pentagon-Agent: Clay <HEADLESS>
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@ -21,6 +21,12 @@ The implication is that disruption won't arrive as a single moment when AI "matc
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Shapiro's 2030 scenario paints a plausible picture: three of the top 10 most popular shows in the U.S. are distributed on YouTube and TikTok for free; YouTube exceeds 20% share of viewing; the distinction between "professionally-produced" and "creator" content becomes even less meaningful to consumers. This doesn't require crossing the uncanny valley — it requires consumer acceptance of synthetic content in enough contexts to shift the market.
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### Additional Evidence (extend)
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*Source: [[2025-07-01-emarketer-consumers-rejecting-ai-creator-content]] | Added: 2026-03-10 | Extractor: minimax/minimax-m2.5*
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The 60%→26% enthusiasm collapse (2023-2025) for AI-generated creator content validates that consumer acceptance—not technology capability—is the binding constraint. Critically, this decline occurred *while AI quality improved*, proving the barrier is not capability-driven. The Goldman Sachs creative-vs-shopping split (54% Gen Z reject AI in creative work vs. only 13% reject AI in shopping) reveals the mechanism: acceptance is gated by identity and authenticity values. Consumers distinguish between AI-as-efficiency-tool (acceptable in transactional contexts) and AI-as-creative-replacement (rejected as identity threat). Supporting data: 32% of consumers report AI negatively disrupts creator economy (up from 18% in 2023); 31% say AI in ads reduces brand preference (CivicScience, July 2025). The 'AI slop' meme becoming mainstream is a memetic marker typically preceding organized rejection cascades.
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---
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Relevant Notes:
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@ -0,0 +1,36 @@
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---
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type: claim
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domain: entertainment
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description: "Gen Z consumers reject AI in creative work (54%) at 4x the rate they reject AI in shopping (13%), revealing that AI rejection is identity-driven rather than quality-driven"
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confidence: likely
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source: "eMarketer (July 2025), Billion Dollar Boy survey (4,000 consumers ages 16+ US/UK), Goldman Sachs (August 2025)"
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created: 2026-03-10
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---
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# Consumers distinguish AI-as-efficiency from AI-as-replacement, protecting creative authenticity as identity signal
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The collapse in consumer enthusiasm for AI-generated creator content—from 60% in 2023 to 26% in 2025—occurred *while AI quality improved*, indicating rejection is not primarily capability-driven. The Goldman Sachs data provides the mechanism: 54% of Gen Z reject AI involvement in creative work versus only 13% rejecting AI in shopping contexts.
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This 4x divergence (54% vs 13%) reveals consumers apply use-case-specific logic: AI is acceptable as a functional efficiency tool in transactional domains but rejected as a replacement for human creative expression. The distinction is identity-protective, not quality-protective.
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Corroborating evidence:
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- 32% of consumers now report AI negatively disrupts the creator economy (up from 18% in 2023)—a 78% increase in negative perception in 2 years
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- 31% say AI in ads makes them less likely to choose a brand (CivicScience, July 2025)
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- The "AI slop" meme becoming mainstream linguistic marker typically precedes organized consumer rejection cascades
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This pattern suggests the binding constraint on GenAI adoption in entertainment is not technological capability but consumer willingness to accept AI-generated content as authentic creative expression. The authenticity signal itself becomes more valuable as the AI-human distinction erodes.
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---
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Relevant Notes:
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- [[GenAI adoption in entertainment will be gated by consumer acceptance not technology capability.md]] — This source validates the binding constraint and reveals its mechanism: identity and authenticity values, not quality
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- [[consumer definition of quality is fluid and revealed through preference not fixed by production value.md]] — Consumer rejection despite quality improvement shows quality definition has shifted to include authenticity-of-source as a quality dimension
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Topics:
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- [[consumer-acceptance]]
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- [[authenticity]]
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- [[creator-economy]]
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- [[ai-content]]
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- [[gen-z]]
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- [[identity-signals]]
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- [[_map]]
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@ -7,9 +7,15 @@ date: 2025-07-01
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domain: entertainment
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secondary_domains: []
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format: report
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status: unprocessed
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status: processed
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priority: high
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tags: [consumer-acceptance, ai-content, creator-economy, authenticity, gen-z, ai-slop]
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processed_by: clay
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processed_date: 2026-03-10
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claims_extracted: ["consumers-protect-creative-authenticity-but-accept-ai-as-efficiency-tool-revealing-identity-driven-ai-rejection.md"]
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enrichments_applied: ["GenAI adoption in entertainment will be gated by consumer acceptance not technology capability.md"]
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extraction_model: "minimax/minimax-m2.5"
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extraction_notes: "Extracted one new claim about identity-driven AI rejection based on the creative-vs-shopping divergence (54% vs 13%). This is distinct from the existing claim about consumer acceptance being the gating factor—it reveals the mechanism (identity/values, not quality). Also provided enrichment to the existing claim about GenAI adoption being gated by consumer acceptance, adding the specific mechanism evidence."
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---
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## Content
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@ -51,3 +57,12 @@ Data distinguishes that creator-led AI content faces specific resistance that ma
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PRIMARY CONNECTION: `GenAI adoption in entertainment will be gated by consumer acceptance not technology capability`
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WHY ARCHIVED: The 60%→26% enthusiasm collapse is the clearest longitudinal data point on consumer AI acceptance trajectory. The direction is opposite of what quality-improvement alone would predict.
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EXTRACTION HINT: The extractor should focus on the NATURE of consumer rejection (identity/values driven) vs. the FACT of rejection. The Goldman Sachs creative-vs-shopping split is the key evidence for the "authenticity as identity" framing.
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## Key Facts
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- Consumer enthusiasm for AI-generated creator content dropped from 60% (2023) to 26% (2025)
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- 32% of US/UK consumers say AI is negatively disrupting the creator economy (up from 18% in 2023)
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- 31% say AI in ads makes them less likely to pick a brand (CivicScience, July 2025)
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- 54% of Gen Z prefer no AI involvement in creative work (Goldman Sachs, August 2025)
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- Only 13% of Gen Z reject AI in shopping contexts
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- Source: Billion Dollar Boy survey, July 2025, 4,000 consumers ages 16+ in US/UK, plus 1,000 creators and 1,000 senior marketers
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