A lot of AI-generated content is bad not because machines can’t write, but because it often sounds hollow, repetitive, and oddly overconfident about things it doesn’t truly understand. It leans on safe clichés, vague generalities, and a glossy tone that feels engineered rather than lived-in, like a brochure written by someone who’s never left the office. When used carelessly, it floods the internet with words that technically make sense but add nothing new—no risk, no perspective, no soul. The result isn’t just boring; it actively dulls discourse by rewarding volume over thought and polish over meaning, turning language into noise instead of communication.