this post was submitted on 04 Apr 2026
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Not The Onion

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[–] givesomefucks@lemmy.world 63 points 1 day ago

It’s a bizarre read, but the strangest thing about it is Esquire’s justification for the stunt. “We were stoked to have some face time with the Japanese-American actor, but his schedule prevented it,” writes Esquire’s Joy Ling. “With a driving need for a feature, we had to be inventive. Harnessing our creative license, we pulled his verbatim from previous interviews and fed them through an AI programme to formulate new responses.”

So they rephrased questions he was asked...

And tried to use AI to rephrase his answers...

Everyone involved needs to be suing Esquire, but especially every organization that spent money/resources on the sourced interviews

Like, this is actually huge precedent if there's no consequences, even if the actor signed off on it.

You can't just rephrase an interview and pretend you did it. If they can, that's what every media company will start doing. They'd "interview" 1,000 people a day and have a constant stream of slop for people to mindless click and not even really read.

Like, they stopped writing articles people want to read decades ago, they write headlines people will share on social media. And people will reflexively share interviews with people they like, even if they don't care enough to even open the link.

They just want to post it to talk about that thing.

[–] psx_crab@lemmy.zip 43 points 1 day ago

“We were stoked to have some face time with the Japanese-American actor, but his schedule prevented it,” writes Esquire’s Joy Ling. “With a driving need for a feature, we had to be inventive. Harnessing our creative license, we pulled his verbatim from previous interviews and fed them through an AI programme to formulate new responses.”

AI Mackenyu talks about the pressures of living up to his deceased father, the legendary action star Sonny Chiba, and how it wants “to make him proud,”

Wow, ok, so can we talk about how they just open up themselves for a lawsuit. Really, when would people see this as a massive redflag

[–] BillyClark@piefed.social 45 points 1 day ago

This was Esquire Singapore, by the way, for those who mostly just read titles.

[–] QuantumSparkles@sh.itjust.works 41 points 1 day ago (1 children)

This is weird. This is a weird thing to do.

[–] phoenixz@lemmy.ca 27 points 1 day ago (1 children)

No no no, this is not weird, this is just greed

They want the interview because it makes them money. They couldn't get it so they committed fraud to still make more money

If we allow companies to do this, in no time, we won't be able to trust a single interview because all the interviews will be AI slop with answers just made up by AI to be as clickbaity as possible for maximum revenue

[–] chaogomu@lemmy.world 2 points 1 day ago

Your comment, and the one above you, has led me to a new phase;

"That's a greed thing to do".

It's not quite grammaticality correct, but it is the correct answer to the question of "why did that corporation do that?".

I was always told that greed was bad, a deadly sin even. And yet, there are laws that require corporations to pursue greed as a policy. Not that those laws are needed , but they are used as cover for evil behavior.

[–] TachyonTele@piefed.social 24 points 1 day ago

“With a driving need for a feature, we had to be inventive. Harnessing our creative license, we pulled his verbatim from previous interviews and fed them through an AI programme to formulate new responses.”

We've failed as a species.

[–] dual_sport_dork@lemmy.world 5 points 1 day ago

It turns out Yogi Berra was right all those years ago. "I never said all those things I said."