As a journalist, I’ve had a lot of press releases and other communications lately about how AI is “democratising creativity”. And I won’t lie, I can see the logic in that. Most of us have found that tools ranging from ChatGPT to Adobe Firefly Boards have helped us out in some way or other (see here how AI is impacting graphic design).

But there’s a very big flipside to all of this. Let’s not forget that, right now, the creative industries are having their guts ripped out by artificial intelligence. And the worst part? We’re all just standing around watching it happen.

You may like

Will Smith just found out).

Remember one of the best ads ever, that Cadbury gorilla drumming to Phil Collins? Pure human madness that somehow worked perfectly. Try explaining that brief to an algorithm.

Yet here we are, reading Meta’s Mark Zuckerberg promise in July that businesses won’t need “any creative, any targeting, any measurement” because the AI software Meta is developing will handle everything.

This isn’t just happening in the advertising world, either. The tech industry has shed over 22,000 jobs in 2025, with a shocking 16,084 layoffs in February alone. Microsoft, Google, Amazon and Meta have all been slicing through workforces whilst simultaneously investing billions in the AI tech making jobs obsolete.

Meanwhile, the IMF predicts that AI will affect 40% of jobs and probably worsen inequality. Anecdotally, most freelancers have seen demand drop due to AI, including myself. Which is not surprising when illustrators, copywriters, designers and others, who’ve spent years honing their craft, are being told their skills are now available in a software package for $20 a month.

Already dealing with late payments and low fees, freelancers now face competing with algorithms that don’t need sleep, don’t demand payment, and definitely don’t complain about unreasonable deadlines.