Automated journalism can't replace the human form but only if reporters, writers and editors are able to eschew the baggage that AI tends to carry along with it: Bias, the fake and the inevitable cliché
Martin Amis, the British author who recently passed, is best remembered for works like London Fields and The Rachel Papers, but it’s The War Against Cliché that comes to mind in the era of artificial intelligence (AI), automated journalism and robot-written stories. The War Against Cliché is an anthology of Amis’ essays and book reviews, and the title is from an essay on James Joyce’s Ulysses, which Amis reckoned was Joyce’s “campaign against cliché”.
“All writing is a campaign against cliché. Not just cliches of the pen but cliches of the mind and cliches of the heart,” wrote Amis. In television interviews, he would go on to expound on this in his own inimitable way. “Whenever you write ‘the heat was stifling’ or she ‘rummaged in her handbag,’ this is dead freight….these are dead words, herd words, and cliches is herd writing, herd thinking, and herd feeling. A writer needs to look for weight of voice, and freshness and make it your own,” he once told talk show host Charlie Rose.
Avoiding cliches, smirked Amis, doesn’t mean you look for synonyms and “wiggle” them around. The process for him was about being “faithful to your perceptions and transmit them as faithfully as you can. I say these sentences again and again in my head till they sound right. There’s no objective reason why they’re right, they just sound right to me….it’s just matching up perceptions with the words in a semi-musical way even if it is atonal.”
Before we get to bot scripting, let’s try and qualify what is good journalistic writing. And that’s not easy. It is subjective, guided to some extent by what the reader is looking for. Herd words may be precisely that—they work for many, bringing comfort and the familiar. After reading about ‘headwinds’, ‘tailwinds’, and ‘unprecedented disruptions’ through the pandemic, a set of your regular readers may know exactly where you’re coming from and where you are going. The ‘dead words’ will live on.
Or so you think. The only problem? Bots can emulate that penchant for the pedestrian.