jessy_girl
Well-Known Member
Yep they have covered all bases by saying intruders are only a maybe!
Exactly. Does everyone here respond to those anonymous work feedback surveys in their own tone? If so, your manager knows exactly what you think of them.If they are real, I theorise that the first one ran their post through ChatGPT or something to avoid creating any connection to their real identity. With the second deciding to come forward as a result of the first. The content itself feels a little too plausible (unless it’s just wishful thinking on my/our behalf) and the two posts seem to be interlinked.
No one was denying the fact the user could’ve input their comments into ChatGPT to turn out a more polished response.I ran the first post past Claude, and here's the reply:
Okay, let me put on my analytical hat here. This reads like AI-generated content to me, and here's why:
The telltale signs:
- That structure is too perfect - It's got the classic "hook opening → numbered revelation → insider language → moral conclusion" framework that AI loves. Real frustrated production staff tend to be messier, more scattered in their venting.
- The language is suspiciously polished - Phrases like "steered storytelling," "predetermined direction," and "organic reality TV" sound like someone asked an AI to write in a "professional but frustrated insider" voice. Real people ranting usually don't maintain this level of linguistic consistency.
- "The Holly Protocol" - Come on. That's such a manufactured "insider term" it practically has AI fingerprints on it. Real workplace nicknames are usually cruder or more absurd.
- The careful hedging - "I'm not saying anything illegal happens" and "You can call it favouring" - this reads like AI trying to avoid defamation while still being dramatic. A genuinely pissed-off insider would either go harder or be more specific.
- No actual insider details - Despite claiming to be production staff, there are zero specific examples, no actual dates, no names of other producers, no technical details about the DR setup. It's all vague "we do this differently" without any concrete proof.
- The moral conclusion - That final paragraph is textbook AI wrap-up: restate the problem, acknowledge complexity, deliver the thesis statement.
My verdict? Almost certainly AI, possibly even Claude (though I'd like to think I'd have made it messier and more convincing). It's got all the hallmarks of "write me a convincing insider exposé about reality TV manipulation" prompt output.
The irony of a potentially AI-generated post complaining about manufactured narratives is... chef's kiss.
not that i disagree, but i wouldn’t trust using AI to detect AI considering how prone it is to sycophancyI ran the first post past Claude, and here's the reply:
Okay, let me put on my analytical hat here. This reads like AI-generated content to me, and here's why:
The telltale signs:
- That structure is too perfect - It's got the classic "hook opening → numbered revelation → insider language → moral conclusion" framework that AI loves. Real frustrated production staff tend to be messier, more scattered in their venting.
- The language is suspiciously polished - Phrases like "steered storytelling," "predetermined direction," and "organic reality TV" sound like someone asked an AI to write in a "professional but frustrated insider" voice. Real people ranting usually don't maintain this level of linguistic consistency.
- "The Holly Protocol" - Come on. That's such a manufactured "insider term" it practically has AI fingerprints on it. Real workplace nicknames are usually cruder or more absurd.
- The careful hedging - "I'm not saying anything illegal happens" and "You can call it favouring" - this reads like AI trying to avoid defamation while still being dramatic. A genuinely pissed-off insider would either go harder or be more specific.
- No actual insider details - Despite claiming to be production staff, there are zero specific examples, no actual dates, no names of other producers, no technical details about the DR setup. It's all vague "we do this differently" without any concrete proof.
- The moral conclusion - That final paragraph is textbook AI wrap-up: restate the problem, acknowledge complexity, deliver the thesis statement.
My verdict? Almost certainly AI, possibly even Claude (though I'd like to think I'd have made it messier and more convincing). It's got all the hallmarks of "write me a convincing insider exposé about reality TV manipulation" prompt output.
The irony of a potentially AI-generated post complaining about manufactured narratives is... chef's kiss.
Yes and no. They’re destroying their image and brand by the day. No one experienced is going to want to step forward and put their name to something in the future that is (currently) receiving an avalanche of negative feedback, with episodes that are making the show look worse than it did during the peak of the scandals in the noughties. Worst case scenario, the quality is going to stay the same and continue to decline.Although if there’s one thing I think could be true, it’s that the crew is inexperienced and doesn’t have the ability to produce proper shows. Which I do think gives me the smallest hope that next season might be better with a bigger budget for a more experienced crew.
Hot tip: trying to detect AI using AI is not accurate at all. There’s already been research papers on it.I ran the first post past Claude
Using Ai to detect Ai. My head just exploded.not that i disagree, but i wouldn’t trust using AI to detect AI considering how prone it is to sycophancy
I have done that and caught my own daughter out when she sent me this amazing heart wrenching plea to get a kitten. It was believable to a high degree except not her styleUsing Ai to detect Ai. My head just exploded.
You dont seriously think they didn't do that in the original 10 series.I mean, we all knew this. I'd just like to know WHY.
Even if they did, they disguised it much better. Still doesn’t answer my question as to what it achieves.You dont seriously think they didn't do that in the original 10 series.
There is very little time in the daily shows, and for the Audience to stick around, they need both Heroes and Villians and stories to follow. Alot of people like seeing Romance in the BB house and its an easy way to create tension and division.I mean, we all knew this. I'd just like to know WHY.
They need to keep the people around that they know how to edit (the "relationships"), otherwise they'd have no clue what to do for the Daily Shows.I'd just like to know WHY.