Episode
Why Creators Are Going More Human in an AI World
- Published
- Jan 26, 2026
- Duration seconds
- 3260
- Processing state
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- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hkick8Z2kIo
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Summary
There’s a lot of noise right now about AI replacing creators, automating everything, and turning content into something fast, polished, and forgettable. In this episode, I sit down with Paul Gowder to talk about why the opposite shift is happening, creators are leaning more human, more personal, and more real, not less. Paul has spent decades building community online, long before algorithms and AI tools were part of the conversation. We talk about why raw content is starting to outperform polished feeds, why people are craving connection over perfection, and how things like live video, email, and community spaces are becoming trust signals again. This conversation is about relationships, not reach, and why creators who embrace their full personality, interests, and stories are the ones who will stand out as AI continues to flood the internet with generic content. Key Takeaways Polished content isn’t the advantage it used to be: Raw, imperfect posts signal that a real human is behind the content. People connect to people, not niches: Sharing parts of your life and interests builds trust faster than one-dimensional posting. Community is not a platform: Your community includes everyone who feels connected to your content, even if they never comment. Live video creates shared experience: Real-time interaction builds deeper bonds than edited content alone. Email is still one of the strongest trust channels: Writing like a person, not a brand, creates real connection. Stories beat surface-level tips: Teaching what something meant to you matters more than explaining how to do it. Doing the “unscalable” work sets you apart: Replying to emails, asking questions, and engaging directly builds loyalty. Creators should stop chasing vanity metrics: Replies, conversations, and feedb…