Comment by samtp

4 hours ago

The only way that anyone be worried about this slop replacing actual good human run radio is if they don't understand why people like radio & music in the first place.

And what hypothesis exactly is the experiment testing? Because it doesn't really seem like there is any new or interesting information learned from this.

I think you're talking about some Platonic ideal that just doesn't exist anymore.

Streaming services such as Spotify are increasingly filled with AI-generated songs and the average consumer doesn't seem to mind because we're not listening intently in the first place: it's just a background track we're not really paying attention to. I'm pretty sure that radio execs are looking at that and are taking notes.

For talk radio... if I had a penny every time someone on HN brought up that they're enjoying NotebookLM-generated slopcasts, I'd have a neat pile of coin. And I think it's the same story: most people listen to podcasts just to kill time. Soothing, zero-calorie LLM banter will do.

  • there's a whole world of wonderful radio that has been thriving for decades, completely different than Spotify or talk radio.

    It's unfortunate that you haven't seemed to experience any of it, but I've personally loved over the years stations like KEXP, WPFW, Dublab, WUSC

    • Your original post said that we shouldn't be worried because people appreciate radio and music for reasons that presumably can't be replicated by AI. I'm asserting that's not true: it's not how most people listen to radio or music, and AI content is already quite prominent.

      I'm perfectly familiar with KEXP and other stations like that, but this is not how most people experience the medium. It's like insisting that Taylor Swift will never catch on because her music is not nearly as rich and complex as Wagner. Sure, but that's completely irrelevant.

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    • KEXP is a local (and beloved) station for me. WIll have to give some of these others a listen if they're doing similar things.