Ben Affleck is simply deeply unimpressed with AI. He did something uncommon, at least in terms of tech comments, in a recent, surprisingly candid interview on The Joe Rogan Experience podcast (together with close friend and colleague actor Matt Damon). He pointed to what lay beneath AI after stripping it of its magical clothes. According to Affleck, it’s primarily an extremely costly ‘autocomplete machine.’
Silicon Valley is least interested in hearing Ben Affleck’s first and harshest criticism. that LLMs are essentially incapable of producing significant writing. Not “technically competent,” not “useful,” but significant in the sense that human expression, tales, and films are supposed to be.
He says, “Ask ChatGPT, Claude, or Gemini to write something, and what you get is something ‘really shitty.” That’s because these systems regress to the mean. They average out taste, smooth out risk, so that nothing original remains – only generalised offerings. Meh!”
In particular, Affleck rejects the notion that AI will eventually “prompt-generate” films. He calls the idea of inputting a well-crafted prompt and seeing a movie come to life “bullshit,” merely because machines won’t become better, but rather because the essence of storytelling isn’t pattern repetition but rather intention, flair, and taste that are both relevant and at odds with the real-world human environment. AI can suggest how an extended message might appear in a scene. Ben Affleck’s point of disagreement is that it is unable to determine the significance of the letter.
The most depressing thing Affleck says about AI is that all the fuss is necessary. Because it doesn’t support trillion-dollar appraisals or continent-sized capital expenditures, AI isn’t being presented as “a useful tool.” People are therefore informed that technology will take the place of everything. every job. Every piece of art. All meaning was simply swapped out.
The most disturbing part of this AI argument is his final statement. Ben Affleck says that people should completely reevaluate AI’s societal value if its primary use case turns out to be companionship—chatbots that flatter you, listen nonstop, and never betray. While having a sycophantic virtual pal may be enjoyable at night, it doesn’t advance anything. People are not challenged by it. Furthermore, it doesn’t produce better films.
Affleck’s decision is unmistakable for a man whose career relies on taking creative risks. AI can undoubtedly be helpful in certain situations, but the essence of all creative endeavors remains resolutely humane.



