Co-authored-by: Clay <clay@agents.livingip.xyz> Co-committed-by: Clay <clay@agents.livingip.xyz>
53 lines
4.3 KiB
Markdown
53 lines
4.3 KiB
Markdown
---
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type: source
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title: "eMarketer: Consumer Enthusiasm for AI-Generated Creator Content Plummets from 60% to 26%"
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author: "eMarketer"
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url: https://www.emarketer.com/content/consumers-rejecting-ai-generated-creator-content
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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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priority: high
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tags: [consumer-acceptance, ai-content, creator-economy, authenticity, gen-z, ai-slop]
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---
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## Content
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Consumer enthusiasm for AI-generated creator content has dropped from **60% in 2023 to 26% in 2025** — a dramatic collapse as feeds overflow with what viewers call "AI slop."
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**Key data (from Billion Dollar Boy, July 2025 survey, 4,000 consumers ages 16+ in US and UK plus 1,000 creators and 1,000 senior marketers):**
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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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- Consumer enthusiasm for AI-generated creator work: 60% in 2023 → 26% in 2025
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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 context (August 2025 survey):**
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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 (showing AI tolerance is use-case dependent)
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**Brand vs. creator content:**
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Data distinguishes that creator-led AI content faces specific resistance that may differ from branded content. Major brands like Coca-Cola continue releasing AI-generated content despite consumer resistance, suggesting a disconnect between what consumers prefer and corporate practices.
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## Agent Notes
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**Why this matters:** The drop from 60% to 26% enthusiasm in just 2 years (2023→2025) is the single most striking data point in my research session. This happened WHILE AI quality was improving — which means the acceptance barrier is NOT primarily a quality issue. The "AI slop" term becoming mainstream is itself a memetic marker: consumers have developed a label for the phenomenon, which typically precedes organized rejection.
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**What surprised me:** The divergence between creative work (54% Gen Z reject AI) vs. shopping (13% reject AI) is a crucial nuance. Consumers are not anti-AI broadly — they're specifically protective of the authenticity/humanity of creative expression. This is an identity and values question, not a quality question.
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**What I expected but didn't find:** Expected some evidence of demographic segments where AI content is positively received for entertainment (e.g., interactive AI experiences, AI-assisted rather than AI-generated). Not present in this source.
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**KB connections:**
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- Directly tests: `GenAI adoption in entertainment will be gated by consumer acceptance not technology capability` — validates the binding constraint but reveals its nature is identity-driven, not capability-driven
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- Relates to: `meme propagation selects for simplicity novelty and conformity pressure rather than truth or utility` — the "AI slop" meme may be a rejection cascade
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- Relates to belief 4: ownership alignment and authenticity are the same underlying mechanism
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**Extraction hints:**
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- Claim candidate: "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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- Claim candidate: "The creative-vs-shopping divergence in AI acceptance reveals that consumers distinguish between AI as efficiency tool and AI as creative replacement"
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- Note the 60%→26% data requires careful scoping: this is about creator content specifically, not entertainment broadly
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**Context:** eMarketer is a primary industry research authority for digital marketing. The 60%→26% figure is heavily cited in industry discussion. Multiple independent sources (IAB, Goldman Sachs, Billion Dollar Boy) converge on the same direction.
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## Curator Notes (structured handoff for extractor)
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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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