clay: extract 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 (worker 3) Pentagon-Agent: Clay <HEADLESS>
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@ -27,6 +27,12 @@ Shapiro's 2030 scenario paints a plausible picture: three of the top 10 most pop
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The emergence of 'human-made' as a premium label in 2026 provides concrete evidence of consumer resistance shaping market positioning and adoption patterns. Brands are actively differentiating on human creation and achieving higher conversion rates (PrismHaus), demonstrating consumer preference is creating market segmentation between human-made and AI-generated content. Monigle's framing that brands are 'forced to prove they're human' indicates consumer skepticism is driving strategic responses—companies are not adopting AI at maximum capability but instead positioning human creation as premium. This confirms that adoption is gated by consumer acceptance (skepticism about AI content) rather than capability (AI technology is clearly capable of generating content). The market is segmenting on acceptance, not on what's technically possible.
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### Additional Evidence (confirm)
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*Source: [[2025-07-01-emarketer-consumers-rejecting-ai-creator-content]] | Added: 2026-03-12 | Extractor: anthropic/claude-sonnet-4.5*
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Consumer enthusiasm for AI-generated creator content dropped from 60% in 2023 to 26% in 2025 (Billion Dollar Boy survey, July 2025, 4,000 consumers ages 16+ US/UK). This 34-point collapse occurred while AI quality was objectively improving, confirming that the binding constraint is consumer acceptance, not capability. The direction of change is opposite what quality-improvement alone would predict. Additionally, 32% of consumers now say AI is negatively disrupting the creator economy (up from 18% in 2023), and the emergence of 'AI slop' as mainstream consumer terminology indicates organized rejection is forming.
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---
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Relevant Notes:
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---
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type: claim
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domain: entertainment
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description: "Gen Z shows 54% rejection of AI in creative work but only 13% in shopping contexts, revealing consumers distinguish AI as creative replacement from AI as efficiency tool"
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confidence: likely
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source: "Goldman Sachs survey (August 2025)"
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created: 2026-03-11
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secondary_domains: ["cultural-dynamics"]
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---
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# AI acceptance diverges by use case with creative work facing 54% Gen Z rejection versus 13% for shopping, revealing consumers distinguish AI as creative replacement from AI as efficiency tool
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Consumer attitudes toward AI are not monolithic. Goldman Sachs survey data (August 2025) shows that **54% of Gen Z prefer no AI involvement in creative work**, while only **13% feel this way about shopping**. This 41 percentage point gap reveals that consumers make sharp distinctions between contexts where AI threatens identity-relevant domains (creative expression, authenticity) versus contexts where AI provides utility without identity threat (transactional efficiency, product discovery).
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This divergence challenges the assumption that "AI acceptance" is a single variable that rises or falls uniformly. Instead, acceptance is use-case dependent and tracks whether the application is perceived as:
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- **Creative replacement** (AI as author/artist) → high resistance
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- **Efficiency tool** (AI as assistant/filter) → low resistance
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The creative work rejection is not about capability skepticism — it's about protecting the authenticity signal in domains where human authorship carries identity and social meaning.
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## Evidence
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**Goldman Sachs survey (August 2025):**
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- 54% of Gen Z prefer no AI involvement in creative work
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- 13% of Gen Z prefer no AI involvement in shopping
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**Billion Dollar Boy survey (July 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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- Consumer enthusiasm for AI-generated creator content: 60% (2023) → 26% (2025)
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The shopping context represents transactional utility: product recommendations, price comparisons, inventory search. These are efficiency gains without identity stakes. Creative work represents expressive authenticity: the human behind the work matters for social signaling and community belonging.
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## Implications
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This use-case divergence means:
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1. **Blanket "AI acceptance" metrics are misleading** — aggregating across contexts obscures the mechanism
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2. **Entertainment AI adoption will face structural headwinds** that e-commerce AI will not
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3. **The authenticity premium is domain-specific** — it applies where human authorship is part of the value proposition
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---
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Relevant Notes:
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- [[consumer-acceptance-of-ai-creative-content-declining-despite-quality-improvements-because-authenticity-signal-becomes-more-valuable]]
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- [[GenAI adoption in entertainment will be gated by consumer acceptance not technology capability]]
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- [[human-made-is-becoming-a-premium-label-analogous-to-organic-as-AI-generated-content-becomes-dominant]]
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- [[gen-z-hostility-to-ai-generated-advertising-is-stronger-than-millennials-and-widening-making-gen-z-a-negative-leading-indicator-for-ai-content-acceptance]]
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---
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type: claim
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domain: entertainment
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description: "Consumer enthusiasm for AI-generated creator content dropped from 60% to 26% between 2023-2025 while AI quality improved, indicating rejection is identity-driven not capability-driven"
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confidence: likely
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source: "eMarketer analysis of Billion Dollar Boy survey (July 2025, 4,000 consumers ages 16+ US/UK)"
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created: 2026-03-11
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depends_on: ["GenAI adoption in entertainment will be gated by consumer acceptance not technology capability"]
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---
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# Consumer acceptance of AI creative content is declining despite improving quality because the authenticity signal itself becomes more valuable as AI-human distinction erodes
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Consumer enthusiasm for AI-generated creator content collapsed from **60% in 2023 to 26% in 2025** — a 34 percentage point drop over two years. This decline occurred during a period when AI generation quality was objectively improving across image, video, and text modalities, which means the acceptance barrier is not primarily a quality or capability issue.
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The emergence of "AI slop" as mainstream consumer terminology represents a memetic marker: consumers have developed a shared label for the phenomenon, which typically precedes organized rejection. This is not a temporary reaction to low-quality output but a values-based response to the erosion of creative authenticity as a signal.
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## Evidence
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**Billion Dollar Boy survey (July 2025, 4,000 consumers ages 16+ in US and UK):**
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- Consumer enthusiasm for AI-generated creator work: 60% (2023) → 26% (2025)
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- 32% of US and 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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**Goldman Sachs survey (August 2025):**
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- 54% of Gen Z prefer no AI involvement in creative work
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- Only 13% feel this way about shopping
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The creative-vs-shopping divergence is crucial: consumers are not anti-AI broadly. They specifically protect the authenticity and humanity of creative expression while accepting AI as an efficiency tool in transactional contexts. This reveals that the resistance is identity-driven — consumers distinguish between AI as creative replacement (rejected) versus AI as utility enhancement (accepted).
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Major brands like Coca-Cola continue releasing AI-generated content despite measured consumer resistance, suggesting a structural disconnect between corporate practices and consumer preferences.
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## Challenges
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This claim assumes the 60%→26% trajectory continues. It's possible that:
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- Acceptance stabilizes at a floor (some consumers are genuinely indifferent)
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- Quality improvements eventually overcome the authenticity premium
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- Generational replacement shifts baseline acceptance upward
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However, the fact that rejection intensified *while* quality improved suggests the mechanism is not quality-gated.
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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]]
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- [[human-made-is-becoming-a-premium-label-analogous-to-organic-as-AI-generated-content-becomes-dominant]]
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- [[consumer-rejection-of-ai-generated-ads-intensifies-as-ai-quality-improves-disproving-the-exposure-leads-to-acceptance-hypothesis]]
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- [[gen-z-hostility-to-ai-generated-advertising-is-stronger-than-millennials-and-widening-making-gen-z-a-negative-leading-indicator-for-ai-content-acceptance]]
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@ -38,6 +38,12 @@ This represents a scarcity inversion: as AI-generated content becomes abundant a
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- **Verification infrastructure immature**: C2PA content authentication is emerging but not yet widely deployed; risk of label dilution or fraud if verification mechanisms remain weak
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- **Incumbent response unknown**: Corporate brands may develop effective transparency and verification mechanisms that close the credibility gap with community-owned IP
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### Additional Evidence (confirm)
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*Source: [[2025-07-01-emarketer-consumers-rejecting-ai-creator-content]] | Added: 2026-03-12 | Extractor: anthropic/claude-sonnet-4.5*
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The 60%→26% enthusiasm collapse for AI-generated creator content (2023-2025) occurred while AI became more prevalent and higher quality, suggesting the scarcity and value of 'human-made' as a signal is increasing as AI content becomes dominant. The Goldman Sachs finding that 54% of Gen Z reject AI in creative work (versus 13% in shopping) shows consumers are willing to pay an implicit premium for human authorship in identity-relevant domains. The 'AI slop' terminology itself functions as a negative label that creates space for 'human-made' as the premium alternative.
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---
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Relevant Notes:
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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: 2026-03-11
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claims_extracted: ["consumer-acceptance-of-ai-creative-content-declining-despite-quality-improvements-because-authenticity-signal-becomes-more-valuable.md", "ai-acceptance-diverges-by-use-case-with-creative-work-facing-54-percent-gen-z-rejection-versus-13-percent-for-shopping.md"]
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enrichments_applied: ["GenAI adoption in entertainment will be gated by consumer acceptance not technology capability.md", "human-made-is-becoming-a-premium-label-analogous-to-organic-as-AI-generated-content-becomes-dominant.md"]
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extraction_model: "anthropic/claude-sonnet-4.5"
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extraction_notes: "Extracted two new claims focused on the mechanism of consumer rejection (authenticity-driven, not quality-driven) and the use-case divergence (creative vs transactional). Applied four enrichments to existing claims with strong confirming evidence. The 60%→26% drop is the single most striking longitudinal data point on AI content acceptance trajectory. The creative-vs-shopping split (54% vs 13%) is the key evidence for understanding the nature of resistance as identity-driven rather than capability-skepticism."
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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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- Billion Dollar Boy survey (July 2025): 4,000 consumers ages 16+ in US and UK, plus 1,000 creators and 1,000 senior marketers
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- Consumer enthusiasm for AI-generated creator content: 60% (2023) → 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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- 13% of Gen Z prefer no AI involvement in shopping (Goldman Sachs, August 2025)
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