AI + Human Design: Why We Use Both
Craft requires intention. Tools require craft. We just hired a graphic designer because excellence can’t be automated.
The Paradox: AI Slop
People are terrified of AI. The Matrix. The Terminator. Robots. Existential risk. Fair concerns.
And at the same time, people are completely careless with it.
They treat AI like Google: type a vague prompt, accept whatever comes out, move on. No iteration. No refinement. No craft.
The result? What’s now called “AI slop.”
Merriam-Webster’s 2025 Word of the Year defines it:
“Digital content of low quality that is produced usually in quantity by means of artificial intelligence.”
AI slop is everywhere now. Fake images flooding social media (Shrimp Jesus). Low-effort YouTube videos recommended to thousands. Entire fake news websites. Engagement-farming memes. Plagiarized blog posts generated at scale.
Mentions of “AI slop” increased 9x from 2024 to 2025. Negative sentiment toward it peaked at 54% in October 2025, according to media intelligence company Meltwater.
This contradiction is the real story: people simultaneously fear AI and treat it carelessly, creating low-quality content at scale.
Why AI Slop Is a Problem
AI slop isn’t just ugly. It’s dangerous.
The problems:
- Misinformation: Fake AI images spread during Hurricane Helene in 2024, used to blame governments for disaster response failures. Fake images circulated during the Gaza conflict. Political deepfakes deployed during elections.
- Propaganda: China and Russia use AI-generated slop for influence operations and disinformation campaigns, designed to polarize and divide.
- Drowning out quality: Cornell University found that AI slop is suffocating the web. YouTube’s algorithms now recommend AI-generated videos to up to 33% of new users.
- Pollution of knowledge: Wikipedia is dealing with floods of AI-generated low-quality content straining its community moderation system. Clarkesworld science fiction magazine had to stop accepting submissions due to AI spam.
- Erosion of trust: When your feed is 30% AI slop, you stop trusting anything. People can’t tell what’s real, what’s satire, what’s propaganda, what’s engagement bait.
The core problem: quantity over quality, engagement over truth.
Platforms monetize views. Content farms can generate 100 AI videos for $5. One quality human-created video costs $500-5,000. The economics are backwards. Bad actors win.
A Concrete Example
Someone generated a DALL-E image based on a vague prompt. Result: AI slop.
Lazy response: “Make it better.”
Our response: “Can you clean up this image based on their prompt?“
That’s the difference. One is asking for magic. The other is asking: What were they actually trying to achieve? Let me understand that intent and fix it.
A simple prompt, but a thoughtful one. The intention is clear: understand the original vision and refine it.
This is intentional work. Not lazy work. Not “make it better.” But “understand what you meant and make it better.”
What AI Actually Is
AI is a tool. Not magic. Not a replacement for thinking. Not a shortcut to excellence.
Good AI work requires:
- Clear vision of what you actually want
- Understanding the tool’s strengths AND limitations
- Intentional prompting (not lazy)
- A critical eye on output
- Willingness to iterate 3-5 times minimum
- Knowing WHEN to use AI (ideation, iteration, efficiency)
- Knowing WHEN to use humans (craft, final execution, excellence)
Bad AI work is lazy AI work.
One prompt. Accept first output. Post it. Move on.
That’s not AI—that’s abdicating responsibility.
How We Use AI (The Right Way)
At Little 6 Industries, we use AI for what it’s good at:
- Ideation: Explore multiple directions fast
- Research: Synthesize information, identify patterns
- First drafts: Blog content, social captions, design concepts
- Iteration: Refine based on feedback, test variations
- Efficiency: Get 80% there so humans can do the final 20%
But we don’t use AI for what matters most: craft, judgment, excellence, final execution.
That’s human work.
Why We Hired a Graphic Designer
People ask: “You use AI—why hire a designer?”
Because AI can generate concepts. Designers create work that moves people.
There’s a difference.
A designer understands:
- How color actually works (not what AI guesses)
- Typography as a tool, not decoration
- Composition and visual hierarchy
- How a design will actually print on fabric, sticker, wood
- The client’s vision—and when to push back on it
- Why something works, not just that it does
AI can iterate. A designer can think.
That’s not anti-AI. That’s pro-excellence.
We use AI to generate 10 quick concepts so a designer can refine one into something great. That’s the workflow that actually produces quality.
How We Actually Made This
This blog post is a perfect example of the workflow we’re describing.
We (the team at Little 6) identified a problem. AI slop is everywhere. People treat it carelessly. We wanted to articulate why.
AI generated initial drafts at scale. Fast. Explored multiple angles.
Then humans took over: revised, refined, said “this is too machine-sounding,” rewrote entire sections, added research, added references, added the origin story about “clean this image up,” shaped it into something that actually means something.
The result? A product created by a team. Not “AI wrote this.” Not “humans wrote this.” We wrote this.
That’s the actual workflow. And that’s what excellence looks like in 2026.
What This Means for You
When you order custom designs from Little 6 Industries, you’re getting:
- AI-assisted ideation (faster, more options)
- Human design expertise (quality that matters)
- Iteration based on your vision (not just what the algorithm produced)
- Technical knowledge of how designs actually print
- Someone who will push back if something won’t work
- Excellence, not efficiency
We’re not afraid of AI. We’re skeptical of lazy work. There’s a difference.
The Brand Behind the Brand
We obsess over details. We iterate. We combine tools (AI for speed, humans for judgment) to produce work that actually matters.
That’s not anti-technology. That’s pro-craft.
And yeah—we just hired a designer to make sure that never changes.
The brand behind the brand.
References & Further Reading
On AI Slop & Its Definition:
- Merriam-Webster: 2025 Word of the Year — “Slop” — Official definition and explanation from Merriam-Webster.
- The Conversation: “What is AI Slop? A Technologist Explains” — Clear technical breakdown of AI slop characteristics.
- Meltwater: AI Slop Consumer Sentiment Analysis — 2.4 million mentions tracked; 9x increase from 2024-2025; sentiment data.
On AI Slop Impacts & Problems:
- Fast Company: “How ‘Slop’ Became the Defining Word of 2025” — Real-world examples: fake hurricane rescue images, political deepfakes, propaganda use.
- PMC/NIH: “AI-Generated Slop in Online Biomedical Science Educational Videos” — Peer-reviewed study on slop prevalence in educational content.
- The National Desk: “What is AI Slop and How Is It Impacting Americans?” — Misinformation, foreign influence operations, election interference.
On Identifying AI Slop:
- Vervocity: “What is AI Slop? Merriam-Webster’s 2025 Word” — Practical guide to identifying AI-generated images and text; how to spot telltale signs.
Key Takeaway:
The distinction between AI slop and legitimate AI-assisted content lies in intent and execution. AI tools used thoughtfully to enhance human creativity serve different purposes than mass-produced synthetic content designed solely to game algorithms and generate revenue.
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