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fallinditchyesterday at 11:01 PM3 repliesview on HN

Sounds like a great show, will give it a listen.

To the author: do you use AI at all in the creative aspects of the production? I assume that AI assistance in creative writing is now mainstream, and an accepted tool for most writers. I am interested to know your thoughts on this subject and if you use AI then what sort of methods do you use?

Note: Google Gemini reports that "the most successful writers in 2025 use me as a "distillation machine." They write 1,000 words of raw emotion, then ask me to help them find the "300 words that actually matter"


Replies

didgeoridooyesterday at 11:02 PM

Google Gemini has literally no idea how it is being used. It made that up.

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I-M-Syesterday at 11:40 PM

I haven't really found a way to incorporate AI into my creative process.

I do sometimes use it as thesaurus on steroids when I can't think of the right word or if I need to check grammar / sentence structure (I'm not a native speaker). I would never use AI in the way Gemini self-reports (and I doubt that's really a thing anyway).

I might be tempted to use it for episode art if I didn't have access to a professional illustrator.

I am experimenting with some AI-generated music at the moment, but that's for background cues that I'd use canned royalty-free music for anyway (emotionally important scenes have tailored-made music done by a professional composer).

One way I'm eyeing to use AI in the future is as a way to translate what are currently audio stories into video. But I feel we're still not there.

empressplayyesterday at 11:30 PM

> I assume that AI assistance in creative writing is now mainstream, and an accepted tool for most writers.

It absolutely is not. In fact the Nebula awards just banned entries from having _any_ AI use involved with them whatsoever. You can't even use them for grammar correction.

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