Knitting Bullshit

A woman stands outdoors, holding colorful knitted fabric while smiling, surrounded by blossoming trees.

My theme today is Knitting Bullshit and before I begin, I had better explain to you what I understand bullshit to be. In what follows, “bullshit” is used very much in the sense that Princeton philosopher Harry Frankfurt describes in his seminal essay, On Bullshit (1986; 2005). For Frankfurt, bullshit is an utterance with “a lack of connection to concern with truth” and an “indifference to how things really are.” From the off, Frankfurt tells us, it is important to understand that bullshit is, in its peculiarly execrable nature, materially different to a lie. While a liar displays an underlying respect for the truth in the very act of intentionally distorting it, “the essence of bullshit”, Frankfurt writes “is not that it is false but that it is phony.” For Frankfurt, then, bullshit, is discourse from which incidental matters like truth and reality have been completely hollowed out and replaced by performance and simulation. Unfortunately, as none of us can fail to be aware, we live in an age of bullshit; a moment when the bullshitter-in-chief sits in the White House daily purveying what Frankfurt, before his death in 2023, memorably referred to as “farcically unalloyed bullshit”. You’ll no doubt be pleased to hear, though, that the bullshit I am going to talk about today is of a very specific rather than a general kind: yes, what concerns me here is knitting bullshit.  

A woman with styled hair and red lipstick holding knitting needles and a partially knitted red fabric, looking directly at the camera.

I have been thinking about knitting bullshit now for quite some time, but I was alerted to a particular type of it while listening to Jamie Bartlett’s excellent series Everything is Fake and Nobody Cares (available wherever you get your podcasts). The first episode includes an interview with Anne McHealy, head of product at Inception Point AI, a podcasting company founded by Jeanine Wright, formerly COO at Wondery. Until its dissolution (by Amazon in 2025 at the cost of 110 jobs), Wondery was known for producing high quality, human-authored, narrative content. Inception Point AI, on the other hand, is a slop factory employing just 8 people which, according to Anne, publishes “about 3000 podcast episodes per week, hosted by AI personalities.” Anne tells Jamie, that, to date, Inception Point AI’s  podcasts have accumulated “12 million lifetime downloads. And we’re averaging about 750,000 downloads a month.” Stunned by these extraordinary figures, Jamie asks Anne about the editorial oversight of the content which she produces. Does she, or any of her colleagues, actually listen to any of these 3000 weekly episodes? With only 8 employees, who on earth has time to check the accuracy or quality of these podcasts? The answer, is, of course, that no one checks or edits the podcast content– but, Anne tells Jamie blithely, this really doesn’t matter because the topics under discussion are so low stakes:

“most of our content sits squarely in topics that aren’t life or death necessarily. So gardening, for example, knitting, cooking, these things we can afford to be wrong. And it’s not necessarily the end of the world.”

A woman in a pink gingham dress is knitting pink yarn while standing next to a sink.

Listening to this apologist for automated arbitrage with a kind of fascinated horror, I found myself pulled up short. Knitting, you say? Not life or death, you say? Who are you kidding, Anne?

Two young women, one holding an orange knitted piece, while the other assists, in a vintage, outdoors setting.

So, of course I went to listen to Inception Point AI’s “knitting” podcast. I heartily encourage you not to do the same, not least because this joyless experience would be contributing to the slop factory’s jaw-dropping (and depressing) number of downloads while simultaneously serving you ads for accounting software and small business insurance (your tailored marketing will, of course, be personal to you). No, I have now done that work for you; those few sad hours are forever lost to me, and I am here to tell you that this ai generated knitting “content” is just as bad as you imagine. Worse than you imagine. Much, much worse. 

A woman in a vintage floral dress smiles while knitting a red item, teaching a young boy beside her, who appears excited and engaged. In the background, another girl is also involved in an activity. The setting features a playful, retro aesthetic.

Let’s take the first episode on Knitting Through the Ages, for example. The podcast opens by promising to “examine the cultural significance of knitting. . . the way this simple act of looping yarn has brought people together across generations and continents. We’ll be delving into the juicy details and quirky anecdotes that make the story of knitting truly captivating,” your husky-voiced AI host promises, “. . . from ancient Egyptian socks to the rise of knitting as a global phenomenon, we’ll uncover the hidden stories and colourful characters that have shaped this beloved craft.” Indeed, the host does go on to talk about a pair of ancient Egyptian socks, before leaping forward to a discussion of the contemporary global knitting community . . . but there is nothing in-between. Nothing. Nada. Zilch. Yes, that’s right: the entire history of knitting is encompassed by a pair of Egyptian socks and Ravelry. But if these two huge historical milestones are apparently the only available topics then of what, pray, is the rest of the episode composed? I sat through 15 minutes which sounded as if the AI had been trained on a decade’s worth of poorly-composed yarn marketing material, and was spewing it back out at me as a syrupy word salad. As I listened, I could feel my grey matter dissolving into a kind of marshmallow soup as each sentence made its own kind of inane, sweet sense, while saying precisely nothing

A woman in a vintage dress knitting with red yarn, focused on her craft.

So far, so slop. Thanks so much, Inception AI, for such an insightful episode covering, as promised, the whole of knitting’s long, difficult, contested history: a story involving  the invisible labour and creativity of women, the exploitation of that creativity and labour, industrialisation, ingenuity, resistance, solidarity . . . oh, you’re not telling that story, I’m so sorry. Let’s swiftly move on to the episode about knitting design. . . . 

Three women in vintage clothing knitting together, smiling and engaging in conversation while working on a large piece of knitted fabric.


The Art of Knitting Pattern Design begins with another hollow marshmallow preçis that  seems to promise so very much

“Join us as we unravel the creative process from the initial spark of an idea to the final stitches of a beautifully designed garment. We’ll explore the diverse realm of knitting pattern types, including the delicate intricacies of lace, the mesmerizing textures of cables, the playful interplay of colorwork, and more. But that’s not all.”

Oh no? 

We’ve gathered wisdom from renowned knitting experts and designers who will share their unique perspectives, design philosophies, and favorite techniques. Their insights will provide you with a deeper understanding of the art and science behind creating patterns that not only look stunning, but also feel enjoyable to knit.” 

A woman sitting in a grassy field, knitting with pink yarn, wearing a pink and green patterned dress.

Tell me more! I’m so ready to learn from these renowned knitting experts who are, the AI host informs me, so “receptive to the beauty and inspiration that surrounds us every day.” So imagine my disappointment when I discover that, although explicitly named and extensively quoted, none of these expert designers actually exists!  That’s right: rather than the real knitting experts who, through their patterns, webinars, magazine articles, books, digital forums, substacks, podcasts and instructional videos, generously share their accumulated wisdom with the global crafting community every single day, Michael Lee, Elizabeth Brown, Daniel Nakamura,  Olivia Patel and Emily Davis are mere AI confections, whose bland utterances remind you to “embrace the process” and feel “confident and empowered” even as you leave the episode having learnt precisely nothing about knitting in general or design in particular. The creative labour of knitwear design—which today employs thousands of talented people around the world—is here substituted with the saccharine simulacrum of “joy” and “possibility”, a hollow promise held out, in each episode, to keep you listening, “engaged,” enthralled.  

A woman wearing a pink knitted hat and vest, smiling while knitting with pink yarn among flowering plants.

I don’t think we need any further examples of this content to understand just how badly and how baldly it has addressed itself to the extraordinary creative practice and the vibrant global community of which I am proud to be a part, hollowed it out, and transformed it into Bullshit of the purest, most unalloyed kind. But, honestly, the thing that I found most weird (in the way that AI bullshit can so often feel weird or uncanny) is the sleek manner in which these podcast episodes substituted what one might refer to as the “truth” or “reality” of knitting with a register of emotional validation familiar to anyone who has ever asked a question of Claude or ChatGPT.

Two young girls wearing matching gingham dresses and bows in their hair, standing in a grassy field with trees and hills in the background. They appear to be exchanging a small basket.

In the same way that Chat GPT applauds your simply being there and asking it such a genuinely insightful question, the podcast continually congratulates you for your excellent crafting choices. That is, having listened to several episodes of this podcast you will come away having learned absolutely nothing about knitting itself, but you might well feel good about knitting, and indeed about being a knitter, because the podcast is repeatedly telling you just how how good it feels to be one

A woman in a vintage dress holding a piece of knitting, smiling while outdoors with blurred trees in the background.

There is a one episode which purportedly covers advanced knitting techniques, but which, having precisely nothing to say about such matters, instead continually asks you to imagine the joy you are going to feel as the stitches emerge from your needles, or to picture the satisfaction of finally wrapping yourself up in the “cosy” or “mesmerising” (words to which the AI returns repeatedly) work of your own hands. 

Two women dressed in vintage clothing are sitting together, attentively dressing a doll in a knitted outfit. Colorful yarn balls are scattered in the foreground.

Ye gods! The emotively persuasive synthetic horror! What a time to be alive.

Two women sitting together, smiling and knitting. One woman is wearing a pink dress and holding knitting needles, while the other is dressed in a blue patterned outfit, focusing on their work.

Just as I was mulling over these post-post-modern contradictions of an AI substituting its lack of connection to real-world human-embodied, material practices with imaginary encomiums about what such practices feel like to the practitioner, I was assailed by yet another example of knitting bullshit. Now, I’d like to point out that this is a different kind of bullshit—one which involves more human intervention than the unmediated digital arbitrage we have so far been discussing—but it is bullshit nonetheless,

This AI generated animated film, which ostensibly takes “knitting” as its subject, has had more than 100,000 views and elicited more than 500 enthusiastic comments, the majority from knitters remarking on how good it makes them feel. Now, if you were among the commenters, or indeed, have watched and enjoyed this film, in what follows I mean no criticism of you at all. This animation is specifically intended to make you feel good in general, and to feel good about knitting in particular—so of course you are left with a warm, fuzzy, happy feeling having sat through it. But while the feeling of the animation might be persuasive and familiar, its actual narrative content seems not just of secondary, but of negligible concern, both to the AI and whoever has prompted it (we could spend a long time discussing how “creative” AI prompts can be, and I’m definitely not here to mull over that).

A woman with styled hair holds a large piece of pink knitting, smiling at the camera.

But what I am here to talk about is the fact that this animation continually tells you that it is concerned with the long history of knitting, while having nothing to say about its subject at all. And I’d like, at this point, to bring back Harry Frankfurt, whose essay draws a useful distinction between different kinds of bullshit. On the one hand there is the type of bullshit which is “merely emitted or dumped,” with which we might associate the automatically-generated podcast slop we discussed earlier. But on the other hand, Frankfurt says, there is “carefully wrought bullshit”: that is, bullshit which appears to really have something to say, and which disguises the empty void at its black heart with a persuasive façade of emotional sincerity. Even if we set to one side the explicit intention of an AI generated animation, which has been posted on YouTube for monetised likes, clicks and views, this short film would still squarely in Frankfurt’s latter category: it is carefully wrought knitting bullshit par excellence. 

A surreal image featuring a woman knitting, with a miniature woman sitting on her lap, both dressed in vintage clothing, against a textured background.

You can get a reasonable taste of its particular flavour of bullshit even without watching the AI generated video, but by simply reading its description, which deploys exactly the same syrupy, quasi-mythological, meaningless emotional register as the accompanying imagery and audio. “Before writing. Before anyone thought to write anything down at all – there were hands, and thread, and the slow click of needles in the dark . . .

Two women in vintage clothing, one smiling and holding pink knitting, while the other appears in the background wearing a pink blouse.

Setting aside the obvious fact that none of our knitting ancestors, however primitive, were ever likely to have been knitting in the dark this is definitely pure bullshit. The description continues: “ . . .the oldest thing people still do. Not a craft. Not a hobby. A language passed from hand to hand.” The oldest thing people still do? I and Sigmund Freud call Bullshit.

A young person holds a large, red fishing net while standing in a parking area, with vintage cars and a building in the background.

But Kate, you say, why are you being such a terrible killjoy? Why should it matter that this AI animation isn’t grounded in actual knitting history when it celebrates knitting, and makes everyone feel so good about knitting? Isn’t that enough?

A woman in a light blue dress holding a small bundle of twigs or flowers, standing on one leg while walking through a park. She has a brown handbag and wears black shoes.

Well, sorry, no it isn’t, and in this instance I’m perfectly happy to play the straw-woman role of po-faced factoid-obsessed textile historian (if you’d like to regard me in that way) simply in order to point out that one of the most pernicious things about this particular kind of bullshit is the way it casts any form of critical scrutiny as a terrible failure of sensibility. On these grounds you might argue that my problem with this lovely video simply comes down to the fact that I’m so clearly unsentimental, so unfeeling, so terribly bound up with tedious points of detail, such as the film’s weird historical inaccuracies and false claims, its bizarre lack of concern with actual knitting practices (or even embodied gestures), its complete failure to engage with the contested and complicated narratives that have made the craft what it is today; its manifest lack of connection to knitting’s basic reality  . . and other countless other similar matters of small consequence .

A woman with curled hair sitting on a couch, holding knitting needles and a partially completed crochet project.

But all of those inaccuracies, all of that weird, synthetic emotional grasping is not why I object so much to this kind of knitting bullshit. No – knitting bullshit bothers me most of all because of the way it parasitises and degrades our industry and our community.

Three women in vintage attire play with a large piece of thread or yarn, set against a light blue background with shelves of pottery and dishes.

Remember Anne McHealy’s blithe lack of concern for the potential inaccuracies of AI generated content, because things like knitting, “were not the end of the world?” But for us, they really are our world, and the increasing prevalence of Knitting Bullshit really does make, on occasion, the apocalyptic end of that world seem nigh.

A woman in a vintage outfit poses outdoors, holding a knitted net while standing on a street with historical buildings and cars in the background.

Our community has spent so many years building something of genuine human value: a shared body of knowledge, cultural meaning and careful critique all of which lend considerable discursive depth and richness to what we do. But in the brave new world of Knitting Bullshit, all of that accumulated wisdom, all of the real history of knitting as labour, as resistance, as solidarity, as design intelligence, as craft, is now there simply to provide the powerful emotional currency that AI-generated podcasts and videos cynically mine for profit. 

Two women engaged in a conversation while displaying a large knitted piece, seated outdoors.

Again, I’d like to reiterate that, if you enjoyed the AI generated video (or, in a less likely scenario, the AI generated podcast), I’m not criticising you for feeling good about it, nor for enjoying anything which truly celebrates our craft. But as you wipe away a tear or two, and the warm, fuzzy marshmallow sensation starts to subside, I might gently point out that what you are feeling is perhaps less about the content you are consuming in itself than it is about all of those knotty, messy, real-world, materially-based legacies of knitting that have been created by human communities and practitioners over decades and centuries. . .legacies which AI Knitting Bullshit now slurps up and spews out.

Two women smiling together while holding knitting needles and a partially finished knitted garment.

And perhaps, rather than consuming this AI generated Knitting Bullshit, we might like to support some actual human knitting content: the crofters and the crafters, the indie yarnies and designers, the podcasters, the show organisers, the spinners, the makers of ceramic buttons, the colour-lover working with historic plant dyes, the carver of wooden hap frames, swifts and yarn bowls, all of the creative craftspeople that make our global community such a beautiful, vibrant, thriving thing of which to be a part. That human legacy, those human creative practices, that long contested history, that joyful, diverse, contemporary human community: all of those things will remain worthy of our celebration, our love, and our support, whatever the AI-bullshit future brings. 

A woman dressed in a crocheted skirt and a white blouse is playfully engaging with her surroundings, standing in a natural setting with greenery.

All of the images in this post were generated by an ai in response to the simple two-word prompt “lovely knitting” 


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Comments

161 responses to “Knitting Bullshit”

  1. Nancy Avatar

    Thank you! I am up to my armpits in bullshit (my home is in the USA), and it never occurred to me that my beloved craft would be swept into it.

  2. Julie Pulkrabek Avatar
    Julie Pulkrabek

    Agree with your frustration. It has also violated the audiobook industry with computer generated narration. I don’t even buy audiobooks anymore unless they have actual people narrating. Enjoyed your email!

  3. THANK YOU for putting this dread into words so well. I didn’t even know about Inception Point AI either, though of fucking course something like that exists by now. I can’t help but think about what rage other “low stakes” topics are being flattened diluted in the name of commodification on the platform or anything like it.

    >

  4. Ugh. Ick. Speechless!

  5. Lauren Goodell Avatar
    Lauren Goodell

    OMG!!! Thank you for slogging through the bullshit so i don’t have to.
    With 3000 ai generated podcasts was it a day?or a week? – it will be harder to find the real people and good stuff.
    The bullshit non history is very disturbing as is women’s history and contributions are already hidden and hard to find. Thank you for your post.

  6. Carole Cameron Avatar
    Carole Cameron

    It feels like civilization is starting over without learning (or caring) about how we got to this point. Well, I will keep knitting as long as I can and I I know you will too.

  7. Gilleoin Coull Avatar
    Gilleoin Coull

    Oh I so totally agree with you!!!! Even the images are totally nonsensical. In my view these podcasts (I took your advice and didn’t waste creating time listening to them!) and videos and even more especially the AI generated ‘knitting patterns’ are ultimately more likely to make beginners or even more experienced knitters, give up once they have had a number of bad experiences of non sensical ‘pattern’ attempts.

  8. snwillson Avatar
    snwillson

    It’s bullshit, all right.

  9. Bonne Marie Burns Avatar
    Bonne Marie Burns

    Lord love a duck those images gave me a turn! AI is only going to give us more and more vulgar parodies of reality while subtracting authentic human creativity from the equation. It’s every and anywhere content is used or consumed (“powered by AI !”) Knowing we’re all being harvested to fuel this monster is horrifying. My last post on IG was about a year ago when I deeply realized I was only feeding the Beast with my knitting and photography. Thank you for this reality bite.

  10. Vivian Watson Avatar
    Vivian Watson

    Thank you for putting into words everything I\’m feeling about (almost) everything going on in the world. Led by my own world \”leader\” of bullshit. And thank you for keeping beautiful language alive. We\’re going to lose that too, I\’m afraid. Anyway, I enjoy reading your letters to us, the real knitting world. Gratefully Vivian. (Wyoming, USA)

  11. Claire Haycox Avatar
    Claire Haycox

    “What a time to be alive” indeed. Thanks Kate for such an excellent and thoughtful piece. I really appreciate it, in part because I don’t think enough people are speaking-up these days against things which are so clearly wrong or just so ‘dumbed-down’ as to become insulting. There is so much ‘division’, at least in the USA at the moment, that people don’t speak-up for fear of retribution. However, silence is akin to complicity in my opinion. I have always said that it is only when you read something about which you know a great deal, that you realize how much of the information offered is inaccurate, insufficient or incomplete. I applaud you for speaking-up in this area where you are clearly an experienced expert and leader in the field. Let’s all continue to rally against mis-information, inaccuracies, lies and , especially, bullshit.

  12. Jane Whiteley Avatar
    Jane Whiteley

    This is the slop that is stressing the power grid and contributing to the degradation of the environment.

  13. Clare O'Reilly Avatar
    Clare O’Reilly

    Wow. What a powerful blog. The heading caught my attention and your reflections did not disappoint. I plan to re-read because there is much to contemplate.

  14. jane Curtiss Avatar
    jane Curtiss

    Very well said, Kate. I had no idea that AI was oozing it’s way into knitting. Thank you for alerting us knitters and crafters to this problem.

  15. Margaret Swanberg Avatar
    Margaret Swanberg

    I completely agree. After watching 10 seconds of that video I actually felt irritation and disdain, somewhat akin to the disdain I felt on seeing the AI generated diagrams of knitting in ‘Game of Wool’. No warm fuzzy feeling here and I’m definitely not listening to the podcast! Bullshit is exactly what it is.

  16. Susan Rostand Avatar
    Susan Rostand

    Amen!! Thank you for your brilliant article on the travesty which is AI.

  17. Richard Weststeyn Avatar
    Richard Weststeyn

    Hmmmm, I’m wondering why you have to slam the president of the United States? I’m pretty sure all leaders of any country could have been added in. I loved the AI part, but your politics don’t align with mine. I wish you would have left my president out of it. But I’m sure you will still have plenty of subscribers and fans without me.

    Kind regards, Donna jean

  18. Sarah Avatar

    The more I find out about AI, the more I think that Ned Ludd is the hero for our times. It has stolen the creative work of so many people and turned into garbage, while simultaneously taking their livelihoods. At the same time it is undermining real expertise and replacing it with uncritical factoids, and it’s so rampant in universities that we can no longer have confidence in the quality of graduates, while at the same time academics are being replaced with AI marking. But at least we have the honesty of the work of our hands and a community that genuinely cares about that and about each other. I have every hope that knitters and other craftspeople will prevail and, perhaps perversely, humanity will come to hold handmade objects in higher regard. And if they don’t, I for one will be throwing sabatons into the data centres.

  19. Christina Imm Avatar
    Christina Imm

    Thank you for this thoughtful essay – it is so difficult to avoid this one size fits all crap that AI is promoting. I am an ardent knitter – it is actually something that brings me peace despite my brioche and Fairisle addiction!
    Where did you find those photos!!
    Thank you again and I wish you good health and serenitiy!

  20. Oh, Kate: Rant on! You are so right about the pervasiveness of sentimentality overriding information (that might actually be useful or inspirational). Not to mention the pervading ‘whiteness’ of the AI generated images. Thanks for this.

  21. Nancy Solla Avatar
    Nancy Solla

    Wow, this is chilling. Anything that devoid of substance just feels so hollow and dehumanizing to me. Those AI generated images are the stuff of nightmares. I want MORE genuine human connection in my life, especially since I live in the US and there’s so much dehumanization and alienation happening here already. Thank goodness for real live, breathing, thinking, creative people like you, Kate.

  22. Dianne Moore Avatar
    Dianne Moore

    Kate, I appreciate and sympathize with your essay. I’m embracing my upcoming 75th birthday while attempting to drown out the crappy present state of the world, which I hate leaving to my children and grandchildren. It’s frightening, infuriating, depressing and so very very sad. I thank goodness for my large stash of yarn and patterns, losing myself in the creative process while trying to scream at the tv news, which I try hard not to watch. At my age, I’ve earned the right! I’m sorry to be leaving you younger ones with this insane mess, and do hope you all can change the world to Bea better place. Much love

  23. Elizabeth Dudkin Avatar
    Elizabeth Dudkin

    You nailed the saccharine congratulations for having the brilliant idea to consult AI to answer a question at the beginning of every AI response to a prompt. I’ve learned that in academia there is no assignment low stakes enough to persuade a student to take the minute or so to respond to a writing prompt.

    The images are horrifying. A colleague asked AI to label the muscles in a photograph of a human model. Every visible muscle was labeled. Incorrectly.

  24. Phyllis Avatar
    Phyllis

    All of this. Yes. AI is frightening to me and I admit I struggle to figure out what is real and what is AI generated. But we’re not to question what we’re seeing and hearing. This is the way to ignorance, misinformation and madness.

    The pictures are nightmarish, grotesque. Exactly what should be expected from something soulless and deceptive.

    Thank you for calling bullshit on this. How gullible people are.

  25. Omg, the images are perfectly, absolutely ridiculous! Thanks so much!

  26. Hear! Hear! Loved your commentary and the pictures that supported it. Thank you.

  27. I am blown away by this info!!! This has to be part of the race to the bottom for human intellect. Is this the future for us as a species? Uninformed masses, not knowing truth from lies? A tiny number of overlords, hoarding truth, facts, information, and all the money?Thank you for sharing thisChristine 

  28. Another issue to think about is how the AI knitting video plagiarizes and undermines actual human creators of needle-felters and needle-felting videos; the AI had to learn/steal images from real crafters. Andrea Love comes immediately to mind, with her lovely videos. Here’s one to view:
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VLFw2xsxWsU
    She also makes videos for local small businesses in my area.

    Thank you for sharing your views and for taking one for the team by consuming that slop so we don’t have to. No thanks for the nightmare fuel of those photos, though! :)

  29. Angela V Avatar
    Angela V

    Oh my goodness! That was an incredible post!! Thank you for speaking your truth so eloquently. I am practically speechless with awe. I imagine having this discussion with you over a strong glass of whiskey, because certainly tea wouldn’t suffice. And now i shall raise my glass in your honor. Thank you for your courage.

  30. Dear Kate,
    I’ve been reading you for years, and I think this is one of your most surprising and important pieces yet. I strongly encourage you to edit it a bit and submit it as a guest opinion piece to the NY Times for their Sunday Opinion section.

    Here’s what their website says about that:
    https://help.nytimes.com/115014809107-New-York-Times-Opinion-Guest-Essays

    If that doesn’t work out, I hope you will try other mass media publications. This essay really deserves as wide an audience as possible, far beyond your many, many admirers in the knitting world.
    Congratulations, and thanks for this!

  31. Mary Bowman Avatar
    Mary Bowman

    Oh, “right on” Kate. I really like Frankfurt’s description of bullshit. Rings so true, haha. And I found all these images extremely disturbing and creepy. Thank you for your thoughtfulness.

  32. Evelyn Lee Avatar
    Evelyn Lee

    Thank you

    Evelyn Lee

  33. kryptoniteinstant8ca7de0f9e Avatar
    kryptoniteinstant8ca7de0f9e

    Masterful missive! Thank you!Debra Blakely 

  34. Saranya Sethuraman Avatar
    Saranya Sethuraman

    I can’t tell you how progressively freaked out I was becoming by the illustrations until

  35. Jeanne Tufano Avatar
    Jeanne Tufano

    Well said. These AI generated milquetoast media are sickening. They represent a microcosm of the macrocosm of our present society so encumbered with feeling good about ourselves as a way of escaping the degradation of humanity by authoritarian leaders. Brava!

  36. Ellen Avatar

    As soon as I heard of “AI”, I knew that this “tool” could be used for bad. We live in an age where you can’t trust anything you see or read. Some of its potential good has been overshadowed by the bad – shouldn’t be surprising, really. Just deeply sad about this so-called invention on multiple levels. Out of curiosity, what ai did you use to generate those photos? They are bizarre! I typed into AI those 2 words and what it provided had none of that flavor. Perhaps it’s also related to where a person lives? Which is worse, really – reminds me of all the propaganda posters from history. Again, who can you trust? I vote God, first and REAL live people, second :)

  37. Nathalie Bedel Avatar
    Nathalie Bedel

    Hoxton Handmade and her electric sheep. This is what sprung to my mind when I read your post. Both of you have a sharp mind and a way to talk about knitting and anything else in a witty way that AI can not convey. I miss this podcast so much, I prefer not to listen to anything rather than listening to mediocrity.
    AI should be used to make the world better but it’s used to make it worse. There should be rules, but tech bros don’t care about much besides money and power.
    I just started reading Enshittification: Why Everything Suddenly Got Worse and What To Do About It by Cory Doctorow, I look forward to the what to do about it !!!
    Take care and thank you for your words

  38. Simone Avatar

    Anyone who has ever tried to solve anything speaking to an AI “assistant” knows it really is artificial idiocy. Knitting will be my safe haven. I avoid AI generated content as much as possible. It is so scary how helpless it makes me feel.

  39. Christine L Avatar
    Christine L

    What an absolutely brilliant essay, with equally brilliant illustrations. Thank you, thank you, Kate!

  40. Melanie Avatar
    Melanie

    Three cheers for waving the flag for real knitting! We knitters know what we love and value. The rest is just – bullshit.

  41. Thank you!

    1. Ann Sutton Avatar
      Ann Sutton

      The blog post on Knitting AI BS is so good. You validate exactly what I feel about the subject.

      Ive been married 50 years but I reckon we could end up in the divorce courts citing ChatGPT as “the other woman”

  42. Barbara Adamson Avatar
    Barbara Adamson

    A sobering read…but thankyou for the hilarious, albeit some nightmareish, images 🤣🤣🤣 I must check my collection of vintage patterns to see if I have any showing me how to knit a small child…I wonder what exactly the system was trained on to produce these magnificent monstrosities

  43. I agree wholeheartedly with your wisdom and awareness. This is a very frightening time to be living with so much deceit, half truths, that we easily fall prey to. It gets increasingly difficult to separate any truths from all the bullshit. Thank you for your insight and sharing. I love reading your words, one place I can find some truth!

  44. Mandy Avatar

    Wow, thank you Kate! The BS out there is so very thick, and truly everything is fake. How long will it be before we all lay down, plug in, and let ai create meaningless lives for us? Oh wait… it might already be happening….Sickening.

  45. Thank you!

  46. Caroline Avatar
    Caroline

    Well said! Once we stop caring about objective truth we are lost.

  47. Mary Annarella Avatar
    Mary Annarella

    Excellent essay, Kate! I’m so tired of the slop created for clicks and vibes. At some point, it all becomes ridiculously repetitive and homogenous and outright bland.

  48. Susan Steigerwald Avatar
    Susan Steigerwald

    Oh my goodness! What an ugly rabbit hole! I follow several designers and makers podcasts ( and your letters) just to learn and enjoy real talk about knitting. I’d hate to waste my time on that garbage! Thank you for the warning. In the meantime, think I’ll pick up a button band today!

  49. Alexa Kaskowitz Avatar
    Alexa Kaskowitz

    This is an absolutely beautiful discourse about a terrifying phenomenon. Thank you for this!

  50. Celeste Flower Avatar
    Celeste Flower

    Thank you, Kat, for wading through the slop so that we don’t have to. Your analysis of the rubbish that AI vomits out is right on the nail, and like you I am outraged by it, not so much for myself, but for others who have been and will be increasingly seduced by its lazy output. The photographs are terrifying!

    1. Celeste Flower Avatar
      Celeste Flower

      Kate! Sorry for typo….

  51. Kelle Fecker Avatar
    Kelle Fecker

    Amen sister!!

  52. Jane Cavolina Avatar
    Jane Cavolina

    Bravo to you!!!!!!!!!!

  53. Writing, like knitting, is regularly undervalued, along with the researching, interviewing, thinking, analyzing, editing and original expression required to create something unique and valuable. Your writing is always an excellent example of original thought. Thank you for this excellent article. As a journalist who devoted my life to the written word, it leaves me terribly depressed. I will continue to seek out and support real writing.

  54. Verna L Groger Avatar
    Verna L Groger

    Yes, with all the gifts AI has brought to modern civilization, it has also brought fakery, garbage, and real dangers. Your stated fact at the end that all the images were generated by AI in response to the prompt “lovely knitting” effectively authenticates everything you said in the article. I hope we can move toward not only AI regulation, something that’s strongly opposed in the US by the government as well as the industry, but also a sense of decency and etiquette that’s sorely lacking. Your article is an important step in this direction, as you illuminate one example of egregious misuse of this technology.

  55. Lynn Isaacson Avatar
    Lynn Isaacson

    Thank you, thank you, Kate, for commenting on this fast-approaching iceberg of stupidity and pretend knowledge that so many are rushing to embrace. We must know what is real and true and AI cannot be considered a trusted source for that, if anything.

    Kindest regards, Lynn

  56. Marilyn Jones-Davies Avatar
    Marilyn Jones-Davies

    Right there with you!!!

  57. Leslie Maddock Avatar
    Leslie Maddock

    LOVE this!!! Many thanks.

  58. Janet White Avatar
    Janet White

    Kate, I support your takedown of the AI bullshit! It is infecting society in all areas, but the area of knitting and more widely, the fiber arts is where my heart lives and this cheapening and hollowing out of the richness of the arts practiced for so many centuries with loving care and intellect is maddening. Right on, woman!!

  59. Julie L Avatar
    Julie L

    OMG! Thank you so much for that eye-opening article Kate.

  60. Utterly Brilliant. You have elevated my day with your wicked smart sensibilities. 🤍

  61. Shelley Avatar
    Shelley

    AI makes it up and it becomes true. It is making us as a species dumber. As far as I can see AI will reduce humans to the serfs that work to generate the electricity that it

  62. Richard Weststeyn Avatar
    Richard Weststeyn

    Thank you so much for being the brave soul who points all of this out! I do not watch AI anything, thankfully! But I’m so grateful that you would spread the light on this subject. You did all the work and research for us! Thank you! Kind regards, Donna jean

  63. Donna Avatar

    Bravo! I too am filled with dread at the way AI seems to want to penetrate every aspect of our lives, yet provides so little of any real value. I know there are valid uses of AI that is employed in a thoughtful and circumsciped way. But much of what is generated now is inaccurate, false or merely intended to make money.

  64. Those images are so surreal! They illustrate your point quite effectively.

  65. Julianna Avatar
    Julianna

    1000%!!! Brava! Preach on! Thank you for describing perfectly the swamp we are now navigating.

  66. Cathy Davies Avatar
    Cathy Davies

    Brilliant essay! Thank you for expressing so well what many of us feel. The people behind AI slop, who consider knitting, gardening and cooking not a matter of life and death, need to get a life and create something by hand.

    Great rant.

  67. Valerie Bishop Avatar
    Valerie Bishop

    Here here Kate! You are so well spoken! I am so blown away by a the utter nonsense I see on ads or content. I will say something about what I am able to do myself which is spinning at my local farmers market with my potter husband and his small business. I get to tell people about spinning, wool, knitting and how ancient it is. not to mention how some in this world still feed their families with their craft and flocks! We here from many old and young people that they appreciate and do purchase hand made! Regretfully I have to decline selling my yarn as it takes me so long from sheep to shawl, so to speak, the price would be prohibitive. That’s not my aim anyhow. I just want people to buy wool shoes, clothing ect and understand how precious wool is to us humans! I encourage them to crochet or knit and offer to teach them!

  68. Elizabeth Lane Avatar
    Elizabeth Lane

    BRAVO!!!!

    >

  69. Kate, you are a (real, genuine, living, breathing) treasure. Thank you, thank you – and other commenters. We’re all going to need to connect with reality very intentionally and avoid slop as much as we can.

  70. albertarrrose Avatar
    albertarrrose

    Thank you so much for writing this! Rose

  71. Katherine Parish Avatar
    Katherine Parish

    Amen. The higher the bullshit, the lower the character. We see that in government today. All thinking people will avoid such trash, but alas, quite a few of us don’t think.
    Thanks for a well reasoned and well written article on this pertinent topic.

  72. Cristina Avatar
    Cristina

    AI slop of all kinds also erodes our humanity. Discernment, attachment, and attention to the real world and to real human beings slip away into something worse and more consuming than solipsism.

    D Graham Burnett on a recent Commentary podcast is excellent—and even hopeful about what’s possible—on resisting the slide.

  73. Nicole Avatar

    Brilliant writing Kate. Thank you for exposing it. I cant say I have come across IA knitting slop yet, but will definitely recognise it now.
    I wonder if those 12 million lifetime downloads were in fact generated by bots created by the 8 employees?

  74. Marla Lappe Avatar
    Marla Lappe

    Bravo. Finally, some words of real intelligence!

  75. Gretchen E Boger Avatar
    Gretchen E Boger

    Standing ovation, Kate. THANK YOU for taking on the travesty that the headlong rush to incorporate LLM-fueled AI into our world has wrought in all corners of society…including even those we thought were refuges from the crap, like knitting. I have a crystallized memory of talking with a colleague about ChatGPT in November 2022 when it launched (we teach high school history). He said he thought it ultimately would have little impact. Dumbfounded, I said it changed everything, because throughout human history, to read a text has been to engage in an implicit contract between one human mind and another, as one seeks to express something and the other to understand. For a text no longer to represent an attempt at human connection is to break the contract. What we have since learned is that even though we now know at a cerebral level that a text (or work of art) no longer represents the self-expression of another human, emotionally we remain wired to respond to that text in some way as *if* we were connecting with another person. Not only our heads but our emotions are impacted by what we read or view, in ways that presume we have made a type of human connection–whether with a warmly affirming ally, a stimulating iconoclast, a maddening provocateur, or even a deadly dull supervisor. To experience emotional responses to what is, in fact, the simulation of human expression but represents in fact no one at all, is to live in a void, seeking sustenance from bullshit indeed.

    When I no longer can take the bullshit in my work, my country, and my world, I often retreat to your blog, Kate. Thank you for calling out the insidious ways it impacts even these refuges of meaning, connection, and sanity.

    (On a lighter note: The history of knitting episode you describe in the AI podcast put me in mind of a report my husband wrote about Italy in fifth grade — age 11. The section on history reads, “Italy has lots of very important history. In the middle ages a burst of creative ideas led to the Renaissance. Then Mussolini took over and fascism darkened Italy’s door.” Our whole family still guffaws about this, referencing “Dad on Italy” it as shorthand for embarrassingly inadequate narrative.)

  76. Margaret Chess Avatar
    Margaret Chess

    AI scares me to death! I had no idea there was this AI generated podcast company — OMG it’s awful!!! Thank you for pointing it out. I had also seen that video on my youtube feed but never watched it. It looked too syrupy for me. lol! I’m glad now I never watched it! Hurrah for your words. And thank you so much for standing up for the knitting community and for standing down the AI bullshit in the world!

  77. T. Fine Avatar
    T. Fine

    Thank you, Kate! How utterly disturbing to learn about these podcasts. And those pictures made my skin crawl.

  78. dazewondrous580ce5f5cb Avatar
    dazewondrous580ce5f5cb

    Excellent, excellent piece! Thank you for bringing Harry Frankfurt to a whole new audiance.Ellen G.

  79. Beth Bauman Avatar
    Beth Bauman

    This is one of the more frightening things I’ve read in a while. The photos are particularly terrifying. Thank you for taking up the needles of a true knitting warrior. I support you and the cause for human knitting.

  80. Sandy Lopacki Avatar
    Sandy Lopacki

    This article was excellent. I was most jarred by the note at the end. After looking at the rather weird collection of “photos” I had been wondering where on earth they came from. Now I know.

  81. Christine Ludwiszewski Avatar
    Christine Ludwiszewski

    Thank you Kate

  82. I think you hit the nail on the head when you said we no longer have the capacity for valid criticism. The post-post-modern commonality that rises to the top is the ebb of critical thinking from public discourse in all its forms, from the White House to the book club to all social media in between. What we’re left with is a divide between the search for truth and the search for numbness and comfort. I won’t say a divide between people, because I find both those impulses in myself. But the basic willingness to be criticized and grow from it is a necessary ingredient that I see missing from many lives. Anyway I am rambling. Good work and the pictures are absolutely unhinged.

  83. Louise Langhan Avatar
    Louise Langhan

    Wow! You’re proper riled! I knit to escape the unceasing torrent of bs being spewed. Keep raging!

  84. Roberta Lawrence Avatar
    Roberta Lawrence

    Thank you, thank you, THANK YOU, for calling out the AI- generated slop for what it is, bullshit. It’s hard enough to live right now, with the bullshitter-in-Chief spewing his dreck on an hourly basis. My safe place is my knitting. I’ve forwarded this to my knitting friends. I wouldn’t watch the video, because I recognize that the only purpose is to manipulate feelings and say nothing. Also got a chuckle out of the AI- generated pix, instantly recognizable from the strange arms coming out of nowhere! Must go be a real knitter now. Keep up the good work, and someday, when these bullshit tariffs are gone, I’ll be able to afford to order your yarn again! Roberta Lawrence

  85. Catherine Schoenherr Avatar
    Catherine Schoenherr

    Kate,
    Thank you for the energy, thought and time you put into this post.
    Distressing as this subject might be, you are the bright light.
    I appreciate your brilliance and that is not bullshit.

  86. Surrounded by AI all the time, yet “I didn’t know” (the lengths/breadth of deception). –Now I do. AI podcast hosts? AI podcast hosts that people are actually listening to? Never doubt for a moment how important your work is.

  87. Coming from the perspective of a tech worker in a company increasingly centering AI in the business model and practices, I appreciate this post more than you know!

    AI is fundamentally anti-worker, as demonstrated by Inception Point AI’s approach to “product”, not to mention anti-human.

    Thank you for this insightfully pro-worker post on International Labour Day. I am grateful that you see how knitting and politics are connected, in the way all productive labour is political.

    Thank you for sharing your thoughts and opinions so generously, and for taking the time to listen to the AI slop so we don’t have to.

  88. Jocelyn Poole Avatar
    Jocelyn Poole

    Absolutely appalling bullshit!! I am amazed that any person can put this rubbish together for people to look at and read.

  89. Brava! After listening to the BBC podcast you mentioned, “Everything is Fake”, I made note of these AI generated podcasts to a fellow food and nutrition volunteer. We are regularly combating social media concepts that challenge food safety standards. The last thing we need is AI telling us to eat rocks or whatever because cooking doesn’t matter.

    Everything comes with a price and so called “free” content comes with a heavy one. We need a change in priorities for the planet and our sanity.

    Thank you, Kate.

  90. Kathleen Goldner Avatar
    Kathleen Goldner

    Thank you thank you for this essay, both for your right on the mark, and quite beautiful outrage, but also and more importantly for your intense and passionate love for the knitting community. AI is soulless, knitting is full of soul.

  91. Ryan Bell Avatar
    Ryan Bell

    applause

  92. Delia Avatar

    This is maybe one of the best and sharpest takedowns of the AI slop we’re now being fed daily – and not just on knitting! Thank you!

  93. Robin D Aronson Avatar
    Robin D Aronson

    This is so brilliant – and of course about so much in addition to knitting. (Not surprising to me since I’ve followed your actual work produced by your beautiful human labor for years.) Maybe you could share a brief annotated bibliography if favorite (history of )knitting books and podcasts? Thank you!!!

  94. You confirm my choice not to sell my voice into this abuse of humans system as a voice over person and make me wonder if this is the end of the working brain. Evidently bland compliments are seen as sufficient validation for listeners they needn’t craft too
    Older than knitting is spinning then weaving, still done by indigenous tribes to create shelter and clothing. Crafting is essential survival skill assert as pleasure. Your use of enthralled is inspired since the thralls were Viking slaves which is exactly where the ‘system’ wants us, certainly not to be analysing designing and creating. BS indeed!

  95. Shelley Withers Avatar
    Shelley Withers

    Hi Kate,

    This is an excellent piece of genuine writing. In fact, maybe I’m not seeing things right, but the characters in the video don’t even look like they’re knitting, Having taught feature, technical and business writing, and applied research at both the university and college level for over 30 years, AI makes me feel like my professional life’s work no longer is of value. Being able to craft good writing is no longer important because people think you can just use AI. However, the content is flat and without heart. There is no pride, critical exploration, or skill in producing a piece of work generated by AI for you. I loved teaching about grammar, punctuation, content etc and explaining why you need to write a certain way to communicate.

    However four years ago, I was told that my entire curriculum was changing because essentially interpersonal skills were more important than writing skills in the trades ……. So I retired. Now I knit sweaters, hook wall hangings , do lots of yoga and enjoy my family and friends.
    Thanks for and the excellent, critical examination.
    Shelley Withers

    Sent from my iPad

  96. Liza Green Avatar
    Liza Green

    Ps you mentioned gardening and cooking as being two other things that ‘don’t matter’ what on earth is important to Anne McHealy? She clearly has no soul, may be a robot.

  97. Liza Green Avatar
    Liza Green

    Wow, hope you aren’t too upset! It’s just another example of how AI is going to reduce everyone to total misinformed idiots if we don’t have people like you to call things out. Maybe this is big brother’s plan for us all and future generations will be dumbed down and ignorant except for those in control, but your wonderful article made me chuckle and the images are hilarious. Thanks for going there so we don’t need to.

  98. Barb Christ Avatar
    Barb Christ

    Hear, hear! Thank you for the reality check.

  99. I love this post and everything it stands for. I’m tired of the way I keep hearing people say, “well, there’s nothing you can do about it, AI is here”. As if we are not human beings making choices every moment of every day. I love knitting, and Ive been trying to learn crochet, and I’m even more determined to learn it, knowing that it is something a machine cannot do!

  100. Cherie Avatar

    Reminds me very much of the “junk food” that is deliberately designed to make us want to eat more. Tastes good, smells good, easy to chew and swallow, but no nutritional value whatsoever. Thank you for this post!

  101. Michelle Campbell Avatar
    Michelle Campbell

    Well said Kate. I’m sitting here cheering you!
    There are some circumstances in which AI serves a purpose.
    The sadness is that many will not realise the “bullshit” of AI and accept it as gospel.

    I remember many years ago marking university assessments and needing to give feedback to students that “Wikipedia is not an academically credible or rigorous source”.
    So glad to have retired from that life and now have time to enjoy knitting time and enjoy being creative.

    Stay well. Keep being creative and thought provoking.

  102. The images started off as odd (not sure in what universe they are connected to “lovely knitting”), and became increasingly disturbing as I read on.

    Years ago I did a lot of collaging from old magazines. The point was the odd juxtapositions, visual quirks or humor. And it was always clear a person had gone in with scissor or exact-o knife along with a pot of glue and some tape. Several of these AI images felt like creepy, and crappy, digital collage.

    We honor you loosing those hours of your life, which you shall never regain, so that we don’t have to suffer as well.

  103. Jules Jackson Avatar
    Jules Jackson

    Oh yes. Ooohhh YES! OOOOHHHH YES!

    I know, the following has very little novel content – but I hope it conveys the message intended. Thank you very, very much for articulating so clearly the disgust and despair I feel at AI’s hideous hijacking of human creativity of all kinds. Bullshit indeed. And HUGELY insulting to all makers and thinkers.

    Again, thank you most sincerely.

  104. AnnetteCapel Avatar
    AnnetteCapel

    Thank you for wasting your time so we didn’t have to. How sad and pathetic this content is and such a contrast to the reality of “lovely knitting”! Well done for viewing!

  105. alisonmgarnett Avatar
    alisonmgarnett

    Thank you Kate. Your articles are always worth giving time and attention to, and this one is particularly pertinent. I will be forwarding it to quite a few friends and family who work in the field, professional and amateur in the best sense. And the pictures are fabulous in a horrifying way!

    Best wishes,

    Alison

  106. Laura Wickstead Avatar
    Laura Wickstead

    Amen Sister!

    Laura W.

  107. Rhona Arthur Avatar
    Rhona Arthur

    Made me laugh and cry – not necessarily in equal measure. When I was doing my City & Guild’s Knitting I quickly discovered how prevalent AI is in our world and how pernicious. We all need to stand up and protect our creatives against predatory AI initiatives, whether that’s peddling bullshit about our amazing craft or inspirational authorship. Well said!

  108. Thank you so much for writing this article! I was not aware of this! I really didn’t know this bullshit was happening . So disturbing!!!

  109. Katie Freeth Avatar
    Katie Freeth

    Thank you Kate for not only a beautifully written post, but also a searing indictment of the danger of ai.
    What a shame that all the other ai generated bullshit out there is not addressed!
    You made me smile this morning, but in a sad and despairing way.
    Best wishes
    Katie

  110. hils tranter Avatar
    hils tranter

    Phew! That was a monster newsletter. Very well written and informative. Thank you for alerting me to all this – had no idea.

    I hated that video, because they weren’t even knitting, just dancing needles with no yarn being wrapped. Loving all those images – I was wondering where on earth you got them from – some were very surreal.

    All the best, Hils x

    >

  111. Eleonora Knowland Avatar
    Eleonora Knowland

    All that you say is so true. Sweet smelling pap will get the world nowhere and only make money for the few.

  112. MS JULIA D CHARLESWORTH Avatar
    MS JULIA D CHARLESWORTH

    You’ve properly skewered the insidious AI bullshit.
    Thank you for your lucid and funny analysis.
    I totally agree with supporting the real.
    Loved reading this email
    Thank you
    Julia

  113. Carol Grieve Avatar
    Carol Grieve

    Well said!

  114. Agnès Desmyttere Avatar
    Agnès Desmyttere

    Dear Kate
    Thank you for this eye-opening article. I do feel you’re quite upset about this “knitting bullshit” though. Maybe it’s time for a good walk with your dogs, a nice cup of tea, and some quiet knitting—creating one of those beautiful designs you’ve been sharing with us for so many years.
    Regards, Agnès

  115. Chris Hutchison-Hounsell Avatar
    Chris Hutchison-Hounsell

    Kate, you’ve nailed it! I just read this out loud with my husband, eho is also a knitter. You had me laughing the wjole way through, with recognition! Those photos! That inane yet heartstring pulling video! Your clear call: BULLSHIT. You see it. You named it. You analysed it. Now, we need to not spend our limited time and other resources validating it. We need to, as you say, engage with real life artisans, creatives, and our own process and practice.

  116. Oh Kate – this is the kind of content we are here for. Absolutely flipping brilliant and also made me laugh out loud in a horrified kind of way. Thank you for suffering on our behalf and then providing such trenchant critique. I think I may have actually lost contact with my jaw when I read your note about the pictures.

  117. Merrill Hayes Avatar
    Merrill Hayes

    This is so relevant today while we watch parodies of humanity on the national and international stage.

  118. Christine Avatar
    Christine

    Masterly summary of our possible future in this new AI world using an example of what many might regard as a banal subject.
    Perhaps critical thinking and philosophy rather than history should be considered a more relevant and compulsory subject for several years in schools. Many of our current “leaders” and those who supported/elected them certainly don’t seem to have learnt many important lessons from history!

    1. I think the assumed banality of the subject (ie, knitting not being ‘a matter of life or death’) is precisely what is so chilling about all of this. . . knitting (and its history) is accorded zero respect in order to act as the sandpit / testing ground for the workability of this kind of slop model . . . and some of us find it emotionally compelling enough to play along.

  119. Donna Avatar

    Thank you for such a fascinating article. I was unaware that there were AI generated podcasts. This is so depressing!!!

  120. Kate Harvie Avatar
    Kate Harvie

    Thank you for listening to those podcasts so the rest of us don’t have to.
    The pictures are both horrifying and hilarious!

  121. Susan Thompson Avatar
    Susan Thompson

    This, to me, seems to be a part of the general dumbing down process encouraged by successive governments.

    We are definitely going to tell you the truth but as your kind guardians we know you shouldn’t have to hear or think about anything upsetting, worrying or difficult so we have , for your peace of mind, and at the expense of our own morality, tailored, but not in any way really altered,what you are being told to make your lives sunnier. This is only a temporary expedient while our technical experts perfect the design of the rose tinted glasses which will shortly be made available to you all at a considerable but disguised cost.

  122. Jennifer Clark Avatar
    Jennifer Clark

    So well said, Kate.

  123. Thank you Kate! I’ve deliberately avoided that knitting video because I didn’t want to give it clicks. I didn’t know about the AI podcasts – they sound truly dreadful. Using AI in these ways is dangerously degrading to the millennia of skill and knowledge built up by all craftspeople. I am honestly concerned that AI is negatively affecting the intelligence of humanity as a species.

  124. Thank you Kate for listening to this rubbish so that we can now avoid it!

  125. Inger Anna Avatar
    Inger Anna

    OMG, the pictures🤦‍♀️😅

  126. Zillah M Jones Avatar
    Zillah M Jones

    Excellent rant 😊
    The Egyptian socks aren’t even knitted. They’re an early example of Nålbinding, in which the stitches are formed by pulling the thread through loops wound around the fingers and then each other. Sally Pointer, experimental archeologist, just published a book on the technique.

  127. Beverley Avatar
    Beverley

    Well said Kate! It quite rightly has you rattled and you have written an excellent article…….needs to be widely read. Can’t stand the way we are expected to accept the AI version of reality which can be spewed out by people with no actual knowledge other than how to generate computer generated garbage!
    We need to continue to pass on actual skills and lose the reliance on using awful AI and computer generated tutorials to learn.
    An excellent read. Thankyou

  128. Letty Barnes Avatar
    Letty Barnes

    This was a very articulate and persuasive post. I did test AI goop and am increasingly turning away from it. Thank goodness I still am able to recognise it from authentic content. I foresee the day that that changes. I think it will mean the end of me participating with almost any media.

  129. Trudy brothwell Avatar
    Trudy brothwell

    I love you Kate . Woke my brain up this morning with a vengeance
    Xxx

  130. denisea7797764a4 Avatar
    denisea7797764a4

    Perfection.Sent from my iPhone

  131. saraknitwizard Avatar
    saraknitwizard

    Well done!

      >    >
    
  132. Thank you for the warning and for listening to this AI sl

  133. Aranka Avatar

    The issue isn’t AI, it’s the dynamic it creates: endless polished output with very questionable substance, met by an audience that often doesn’t question what it consumes. That’s a fragile foundation for “being informed”, and it devalues the work of those who invest real effort into research, accuracy, and meaningful insight.

  134. Thank you for this! Eyeopening, interesting, very necessary to read and think about.

  135. Grace Grant Avatar
    Grace Grant

    Unsubscribed as I don’t like your political opinions mixed in with knitting which is usually meant to reduce stress not increase it by having political opinions forced on us.
    You’ve been equally vocal about the SNP in the past – again no need in a blog about knitting.

    1. Knitting is part of life… Shame not to be able discuss it. Bye Grace!

    2. Susan Thompson Avatar
      Susan Thompson

      I completely missed the expression of political opinions in Kate’s pièce. Perhaps AI even modifies the versions each of us see to make them a closer match to that which we hope to see.

    3. This closing of the ears and stomping off in a huff because someone expresses a different opinion is a very disturbing phenomenon. There is no room for intelligent discourse in such situations.

      I will also add that everything is political, everything is affected by politics, ignore it at your peril. Of course if you live a life so privileged and sheltered that you think politics doesn’t affect you, then please take a moment to reflect on why this is so and consider the lives of the many, many people for whom this is not the case.

      Thinking, reflecting and engaging in intelligent discourse are of course the very opposite of the sweet but empty feel good messages encompassed by the AI content being discussed in the original essay.

  136. christinefrostell Avatar
    christinefrostell

    Thank you for taking on this listening horror so I don’t have to! Christine

  137. Sandra Avatar

    Bravo!

  138. Denise Brown Avatar
    Denise Brown

    Thank you Kate for revealing the tawdry nature of knitting bullshit. You endured it and shared its dreadful quality so we never have to look, no matter how curious we might be. I hope someone gave you a delicious dram afterwards to feel better!

  139. Kathleen O'Meara Avatar
    Kathleen O’Meara

    The level of BS flung at us daily is unbelievable. Much of it is extremely dangerous.

  140. laura Avatar

    Thank you Kate for this insightful essay. AI generated prose – and images – scare me to death about the world we live in today. I’m an author, like you, and along with many other authors around the world, I’m really concerned by the bullshit that’s being served up. The large language models used for AI can’t discern truth from bullshit. To a large extent ( in my own field) they serve up science babble. And now it’s knitting babble too. All bullshit indeed. Thank you for highlighting it all. Well done.

  141. Mitty Avatar

    This AI slop is the culmination of a trend that has been gaining steam for two-three decades, in which people are becoming more and more detached from involvement in the basic functions of life. We eat packaged food, buy and discard”fast” fashion, overheat our homes, send our laundry out to be cleaned, pay someone to walk and pick up after our dogs, and sit on the sofa watching TV and videos rather than getting out in nature or visiting in-person with friends, while denigrating or ignoring live performances, craft, scientific and creative endeavors, and the real people who do the real work that makes such detached lives possible. Thank you for this post!

  142. Thank you for this disturbing essay — IT is not bs. The pictures and the video are disturbing. I’m also bothered by how compelling that dumb song in the video was. Not enough compelling enough to distract from the bullshit not knitting it was filled with, though.

  143. Amazon shut down podcasts by real people to replace them with AI-generated podcasts… Will their insane choices never cease?!?! I myself am working hard not to support or consume AI-generated content. I don’t see the point.
    Thanks for warning us about this.

  144. Absolutely horrifying. Steering clear of AI is becoming increasingly difficult to do. I saw that video and came away perplexed. Now I know why. Thank you, Kate, for turning over this rock.

  145. How boringly predictable and shit that the latest vile iteration of capitalism – viz, how to produce podcasts at a fraction of the real cost of making quality audio content – continues to devalue, deskill, underestimate and trivialise knitting (and gardening, and cooking). Especially because there are so many amazing true stories that could be told about any of these beautiful and important creative contexts.

    I love your points about the “register of emotional validation” and how this is one of the uncanny ways in which AI is seducing us. There’s something about how the prettiness and the AI-FEELGOOD-FACTOR draws us in and seduces us. It takes so much more effort to love what is real – to love what might disagree with us, rub us up the wrong way, annoy or irritate us, fail to flatter us. But the effort is oh-so-worth it.

    Your post makes me think of two things –

    1. In the early era of “the cloud” which was marketed to us with images of soft fluffy clouds, sound artist Christina Kubisch gained access to data centres with her amazing equipment that enables you to hear electromagnetic wavelengths. The dense soundscapes she recorded in data centres made audible the intensive use of resources by cloud storage services. You could hear, in the dirty roar of electromagnetic waves, the real, material, environmental consequences. When she presented this work I think during Tuned City in Brussels in 2013? She opened with a slide showing an advert for THE CLOUD which she firmly pronounced “bullshit”.

    2. The knitted images created with AI prompts also remind me of the THNEED in Dr. Seuss’s book, The Lorax, whose manufacture displaced the brown barbaloots and decimated the truffula trees whose fruits were their main food source. The THNEED whose production polluted the waters where the humming fish hummed and the air where the swomee-swans sang… The THNEED was an excellent proxy for something entirely unnecessary and wasteful, and all this “lovely knitting” looks to me like THNEEDS. The podcasts sound like the sonic equivalent!

  146. Dianna Walla Avatar
    Dianna Walla

    I always enjoy Dr. Surekha Davies’ description of genAI: “We now know that LLM-based so-called genAI systems are ecocide-plagiarism-psychosis-harassment-surveillance-radioactive waste machines.” (from her Bluesky here: https://bsky.app/profile/drsurekhadavies.bsky.social/post/3mjwbxfaqpk2f). I’ve been working at a university library since last September, and hooooo boy, AI has wreaked havoc on academia…

  147. G. Mulholland Avatar
    G. Mulholland

    This bullshit that you quote is just jaw-droppingly bad, so devoid of any actual content or connection to reality. I’m amazed that you made it through it. Then again, I’m a Californian living through Trump 2.0, so you’d think I’d be used to it by now. To think what we could have had instead.

  148. Juliana Avatar

    The pictures are quite disturbing, actually. Off just enough to make your eye twitch. And yes to everything in your post. BS indeed! These AI people need to go touch grass.

  149. The Other Kristen Avatar
    The Other Kristen

    Thank you for your rage.

  150. It’s shocking. Unfortunately, the bullshitter-in-chief and his minions have already sent my shock-o-meter into the stratosphere; adding knitting bullshit into the mix will likely send me into, well, shock. I plan to cling hard to genuine creative voices and the community of makers, writers and artists, especially those who call out the bullshit. Thanks for taking this hit so I don’t have to, Kate.

  151. Wow! I assumed anything “created” by AI would be bad so have avoided it, but had no idea it would be *that* terrible. Thanks for spreading the word.

  152. Those numbers of downloads are incredible, and I wonder how many are actual people and how many are bots.

    Insightful and passionate essay Kate – less bullshit would be nice :-(

  153. Thank you Kate, for this pertinent essay!
    I think / am of the opinion that the world needs a lot less bullshit right now (or none at all!). Or thinking in conspiracies, maybe drowning the world in bullshit distracts us from the real problems and the solutions to these problems.

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