A high-up employee at one of The Autopian’s competitors recently told me about something bothering them: Their site publishes so many crap articles every month that they now have to spend significant portions of their days replying to car company PR reps complaining about all the misinformation being “written” by outside contributors paid pennies to churn out slop. This is the poisoned well of the internet that we’re all being forced to drink from, and it’s killing us all. Let’s talk about this, and also about a recent MotorTrend article admitting to the use of AI.
As the publisher of this site, I have to contend with the fact that, for all the work we do to be model citizens of the web (we don’t review products we don’t use, we try to pay a living wage, we don’t overwhelm the site with ads, we don’t use AI to write stories), we’re up against sites that pump slop into the ecosystem and surround that slop with as many ads as they can.


While not all of this slop is written by AI, my suspicion is that the writers of this crap often use artificial intelligence to create their articles. There was a recent Reddit thread accusing Jalopnik of using AI, and I replied in the piece that there’s no way the actual journalists there are behind this trend (we know many of the journalists; we think they’re great).
What seems to be happening in various parts of the industry is that individuals outside the normal editorial channels are being given the right to publish by the revenue side of the business, and these low-paid writers (often from abroad) are using AI to complete their articles.
One recent example from Jalopnik is “Here’s What Costco Customers Really Think About Its Wheels,” an article written by UmmeAimon Shabbir, a Pakistani writer whose LinkedIn profile describes her job as “creating engaging content for Google’s Spotlight.”
It’s a strange article that doesn’t seem to demonstrate any real awareness of how buying tires from Costco really works. The top comment asks: “Anybody remember when Jalopnik articles weren’t AI-generated slop?” Another example, from the same writer, describes how Colin Chapman created a car “with two chassis stacked together.” There’s no sourcing for any of the article, so it’s possible it’s based on this article by Huibert Mees, the suspension designer who actually looked at the cars in person in order to write about them.
The apparent slop isn’t isolated to Jalopnik. You might say the internet is in its “slop era.” Some of it’s AI; some of it’s human-made, designed to game the algorithm of the day. It’s hard to tell, and genuinely, that’s the problem. Take, for example, Motor1, which features Google-baiting articles like this one: “‘They Lying! That’s a Tactic:’ Woman Pays Car Note for Brand-New Kia Twice a Month. Then She Gets a Letter 5 Years Later” that are being called “ownership stories.”
Autoblog seems to have some of this, plus a lot of commerce pieces built around trying to sell you tools they don’t seem to have personally tested.
All of this falls under the banner of “slop.” These are articles either being written by a computer or very specifically for a computer (in this case, the one that decides which stories you see or don’t see), or both. It’s not about journalism or quality; it’s about cheaply producing enough content to make money. It’s a sign of how challenging this industry has become.
The only thing I can say positively about the sites doing this work is that they’re smart enough to try to hide it. These aren’t efforts championed by journalists; at best, these are desperate attempts at revenue designed to keep journalists employed.
Ed Loh, the Editor-in-Chief of MotorTrend, seems to be taking a different approach. He’s openly admitting to using AI in a recent post about his EV-focused podcast with Jonny Lieberman.
The podcast went on hiatus for a while but is back, and one of the big changes, he notes, is that the company is now a part of Hearst Magazines, which also publishes Car And Driver and Road & Track, as well as owns BringATrailer.
The other change?
Another big change is that we’re openly embracing artificial intelligence (AI). The InEVitable is, after all, a vodcast about the future of mobility, and as you no doubt have heard, ad nauseum, THE FUTURE IS AI. So, we decided to put that to the test in the most meta way possible, by actively using commonly available AI tools in the production of The InEVitable. Jonny and I remain your 100 percent human (I think) hosts, interviewing mostly human guests, so be not afraid. The main point of the podcast (the guests, our conversation and insights) are still human, it’s the supporting elements that will be AI-assisted.
For instance, parts of this article were written with the assistance of Hearst Magazine’s ChatGPT. We created the social media clip via an agentic AI video editor called OpusClip. The summary of this article used by Apple News was created via an AI tool in our content management system. We plan on using additional AI tools to assist with future episode descriptions, thumbnail image creation, and audio clean up. Why? For all the reasons AI tools are being touted—speed, efficiency, and experimentation.
What Loh doesn’t mention here is that his company’s new owner, Hearst Magazines, is part of a company that just sold the rights to its works to OpenAI, creator of ChatGPT.
Here’s a Hearst press release on the topic:
“Our partnership with OpenAI will help us evolve the future of magazine content,” said Hearst Magazines President Debi Chirichella. “This collaboration ensures that our high-quality writing and expertise, cultural and historical context and attribution and credibility are promoted as OpenAI’s products evolve.”
In exchange for money, Hearst seems to be agreeing to hand over all of its content to OpenAI (the creator of ChatGPT). This is the “suing for peace” version of dealing with AI, and I’m sympathetic to it. Maybe that’s what we’ll have no choice but to do, because some of these companies are training their models on our content already, and we’re not getting anything out of it.
The amounts Hearst got weren’t disclosed, but it’s assumed by Axios that Hearst is being “compensated millions” for partnering with OpenAI. This is all to say that this is the first time I’m seeing this from a Hearst Autos site, but I doubt it’ll be the last.
This seems bad. I’m not anti-AI, and in fact use AI tools in my own life (Perplexity and Gemini, in particular). When AI is used to take some of the toil out of creating art, that doesn’t bother me, but Loh conflating the creation of graphics and the writing of content with “audio clean up” seems disingenuous to me.
In fact, if you get to the bottom of the post, you’ll see it’s not just the above:
Editor’s Note: This article was written with the assistance of artificial intelligence (AI). Future articles in this series will also be AI-assisted.
Loh doesn’t outright say the article was written by AI, just that it was “assisted,” so we don’t know the degree to which robots are writing what you and I are reading. Perhaps we should applaud the transparency here: at least Loh is admitting to using it (though without the context of the OpenAI partnership). However, if we take what Loh is saying at face value, it does seem like he’s at the very least not using AI begrudgingly.
This makes sense given that in a previous piece on Motor Trend, he said:
“They don’t care who generated the illustration…They love it or they hate it. AI doesn’t come up. I think eventually, writing is going to get that way. [Readers] just want a cool story told, they don’t really care how.”
There’s more to the story, and to his credit, Loh mentions ethical concerns and says he does think humans will remain important, but that quote above bugs me because I don’t feel that way about what we write here at all. You readers really, really do care about who is writing the words you’re reading, and if you found out that it was a robot, you’d rightly feel betrayed.
I think I need to be clear about this: That will never happen here, and if you don’t think this is ok industry-wide, if you think it’s important that sites like this one exist, then you should become a member. Right now.
It used to be my belief that it doesn’t matter if all these sites create slop or use AI, because it’ll eventually differentiate our real work. I’m more bothered by this now because it’s immediately impacting how we make money.
All this slop is being created at an exponential rate and swarming the usual networks where our content is shared. These sites are also the ones most likely to be overwhelmed with ads. This means that not only is it harder for our content to be seen, but when it is seen that the value of the ads we show is lower because there’s a glut of inventory.
I went to a conference for publishers this week in Georgia, and there’s going to be more crap like this, not less, in the future. It’s InEVitable…
If we are going to survive the storm, we need more help. Please consider becoming a member if you haven’t, if only to show that there are still people who think good journalism is worth paying for.
Hat tip to Alberto for pointing this out!
If only more people had listened and recognized the original forefront that the media was trying to brainwash us to accept the coming of this was a good idea
No disrespect to your friends at Jalopnik I am sure they are great. However the publications and writers at the time own the issue as they took a deep dive into ego journalism and caused ownership to be sold off of n bankruptcy court. Then quality writers left and Jalopnik became a political site with foul mouthed articles and no automotive content. The writers pushed a political agenda and attacked their readers. There was an attempt to steer back to car content maybe it worked but I know I never went back after a great new automotive site started that sticks to cars.
While you and I disagree on many things, you’re absolutely correct about this. They definitely turned toxic, and if you dared to call them on it, they tended to double down, even in the face of contradictory facts. It really went bad over there. We’re just lucky that the best of them are here.
If anyone can make “acceptable” content using AI, then almost everyone will. Then every one of those new “content creators” is basically making the same stuff.
Being AI-free inevitably sets you apart from a huge volume of junk.
As unsustainable as the algorithm/attention economy is, the AI content creation “economy” (even to varying degrees of “quality/slop”) is already facing an inevitable implosion.
Unfortunately, a lot is riding on making the AI future “happen”. As just one example, they put 500 billion to that Stargate thing, because they expect to make much more than that by shoving AI into every element of public and private life. Powerful people and companies can’t afford to let the market judge.
I guess we know which option Loh chose for the Would You Rather. Hope he’s got a good scrap metal guy!
I love this site because each article has the personality of the writer. I feel like someone is talking to me. I agree, I disagree, but I know who I’m dealing with. Whenever I watch a YouTube video and I see it’s written/voiced by AI, I down vote and nope right out. It’s not much, but it’s what I can do.
[Readers] just want a cool story told, they don’t really care how.”
No. Just no.
I crave Jason’s lunacy, David and Huibert’s deep dives, the Bishop’s creativity, Adrian’s attitude, SWG’s humanity, Matt’s insightful daily analysis of the news, and so forth – to the point where I’m on my second year of Velour, third year of subscribing overall starting from the day subscriptions were offered, and a reader from “March 32nd”. The subscription part is something I would have previously considered unimaginable but it’s worth it, and how the story is told matters tremendously.
AI can only permutate and regurgitate the already existing; it can’t be truly creative and it will never bring the insights that this amazing team brings to the table. How much AI slop feeding on AI slop can it take until the output turns into completely useless mush?
Well hopefully true auto fans can keep Autopian alive. And idiots can follow AI. On the bright side they can’t sell out for big money if AI makes things cheaper.
54% of American adults read at a 6th grade level or below. 21% are illiterate. It’s estimated that 35% to 40% of eligible American voters do not vote or have never voted in their lives.
And now, here we are letting stupid people program stupid AI. And yes, I’ve met some software engineers who couldn’t identify a government branch from a tree branch. Enshittification indeed is unfortunately, here to stay.
Thanks for not caving in to this mistake. And thanks for paying a living wage. This site gets better each day, it seems.
Well we allowed morons to vote and value their vote the same as an educated voter. As long as the system allows uninformed citizens to vote we are screwed
As long as the system continues to deny its citizens basic human rights like a living wage AND a decent education (so they know how to intelligently navigate the system) then we are screwed. Giving rights to one and not the other is not the answer.
I mean, poll taxes were sorta the hallmark of Jim Crow, which is neither an era nor a system I am keen to return to. Who gets to decide what makes for an “informed” citizen, and how would one realistically avoid those elites (and make no mistake, they are elites in this context – the tastemakers who determine who gets to enjoy a fundamental democratic sacrament) putting their thumbs on the scale to ensure only the right kind of voters vote?
Pivoting this back to journalism, I am equally full-throated in my advocacy for no government licensure of journalists exercising their First Amendment privileges as I am about voting franchise. I’ve met moronic journalists; one of the formative events of my early adulthood was witnessing two journalists in Orlando, Florida, concoct an absolute BS story about deplorable conditions in hurricane shelters (the journalists staged this particular shot, in which I was cast as a disinterested shelter manager; in reality, I hadn’t slept in 3 days, had been flushing toilets manually because the lifting stations were broken, and, well, looked like I’d been in a powerless, dirty, humid environment with no sleep). Nonetheless, we have the First Amendment not to protect those who write nice things about nice people, but about those who are willing to slag those they disagree with, take unpopular stances, and otherwise advocate viewpoints we might find reprehensible. That’s how progress is made; views that were anathema 30 years ago are mainstream now.
Hey, at least The InEVitable is one of the MT series where they aren’t buying views yet
Never mind, I was wrong. They’ve bought views for past episodes.
I just assume everybody does but is there a way to actually tell?
It’s not as common as a lot of people think. There are signs. Just as an extreme example (but I’ve seen worse) say a video is doing 100 views/day, jumps up to a consistent 10k/day for exactly 14 days, then drops back to 100 views/day, that’s a paid view period. Organic view growth doesn’t behave that way. It’s statistically possible for that to happen organically, just incredibly unlikely, so when a channel has dozens of videos showing that pattern, it’s more likely than not that they are buying views. There are a couple of other smaller things you’ll see as well, like low engagement rates, but those can vary a lot naturally, so they’re kind of a secondary sanity-check metric
Maybe because they along with hundreds of people have no idea they exist?
Remember when it was easy to find useful information on the Internet?
There’s a minor problem with my dishwasher. Once upon a time, I could do a little search and find someone – usually on a forum – who had the same problem and a fix. Today, when I looked, all I get is pages and pages from suspicious urls where it’s just vague paragraphs about the concept of dishwashers.
You can still find some good stuff on YouTube videos of guys who don’t know how to use a camera, but the slop merchants are clearly aiming at them now too.
A sports site I read published a plea in the past day asking readers to start using a Google feature that overrides their normal algorithms because the normal algorithm returns so much garbage.
Which means, of course, that soon you won’t be able to go anywhere online without being hit with pleas to do the same thing for their sites just like every site hits you pleas to sign up for notifications and newsletters, and the process gets gamed, and searches get worse than ever.
One good use for AI would actually be helping Google sift through sites and flag AI abusers who generate junk. It could reward sites which have real writers and artists with higher placements in results.
Except Google is so committed to pushing AI that they’ll never do that, no matter that AI is killing the goose that lays the golden eggs.
Except AI is designed to to do the same thing.
Scroll past the sponsors. Better information and the soul sucking leaches get nothing for their investments
Gross. The Great Enshitification of Everything. At some point, the internet is going to become so unreliable and clogged with garbage and ads that people might have to interact with each other in person again. I’m not sure how I feel about that.
That typed, I wanted to add that I didn’t think Motor Trend was very good even back in the days of print. It was the dentist waiting room magazine rack add-in because they could get annual subscription to it for under $1/issue, then cancel after a year and keep those issues around for the next 5 years before Publisher’s Clearing House sent them another notice that they might have won A MILLION DOLLARS and, though they didn’t have to purchase to enter, they figured it couldn’t hurt their chances to renew a few cheap clearance subscriptions, right?
“ the internet is going to become so unreliable and clogged with garbage and ads”
As if it’s not already. I also find it surprising how difficult it is to get our kids (high school and older) not to trust and take at face value everything they see on-line! Supposedly it’s a generational thing and not uncommon, but still we need to remind them too often they should do their research, maybe distrust a little at first, instead of believing everything without question….
Yes, but people haven’t abandoned it and resorted to personal interaction again. My older nephew is like that, he just trusts the garbage AI answer that is given primary search status. At least he hates AI use in art.
The future: AI articles mainly read by AI … I hate this. We can rent some shortwave time pretty cheap from that giant station in Maine and beam podcasts around the globe, instead. It worked for the whackos in the pre-internet days.
Ugh, I really hate this direction.
Welp, there’s another reason why The Autopian is the only site I willingly pay for.
It’s kind of neat that I’ve been fumbling around the same sites for years and recognize your username.
Yeah my internet footprint over the years has been pretty large. Literally this morning I was searching for some car info and one of the Google results was my own Mustang forum post from 20 years ago lol.
I remember you from the days of Jalopnik and the “Cotomer Sevis” era…
Yep! I’m still in contact with some people from that era, including Murilee Martin.
We need more Phil!
That’s how I feel/part of what I love about here. I know pretty much all the writers (know meaning “know of”, though I’d love to meet more of the squad IRL and do a Malort tour of my city with Stef). I recognize users, editors. It’s a community that I’m proudly part of.
I agree, even if this weekend I will be cursing David as I resurrect my rotten and crusty ’94 ZJ that he unwittingly spurred me to buy during COVID.
https://www.jalopnik.com/a-beautiful-holy-grail-jeep-grand-cherokee-is-for-sale-1842901529/
happy to pay for this website and the verge, they have a handful of really fantastic journalists
wut?
I think a million monkeys with a million computers would write better articles than any AI.
Isn’t that what the Autopian is? /S haha
To paraphrase the late, great automotive writer Ken Purdy (who was referring to automatic transmissions), “I need a machine to write stories for me about as much as I need a machine to eat strawberries for me.”
All I can do is put my time and money where my eyeballs and brain want to be, and that’s not at a site with AI-generated content.
If any of the following stories show up in The Autopian, I’m out:
“Five Ways to Tell if Your Headlights Are On”
“Which Window is Your Windshield? Experts’ Surprising Opinions”
“Buick Rendezvous Models With the Greatest Appreciation Potential”
“Why Did the Chevrolet Chevette Come in 14 Colors While the Tesla Model Y Comes in Only 5?” (OK, “what happened to color” is a real question that should be addressed, but not by AI.)
I’d want to read all of those articles so long as Torch writes them.
Absolutely. We would be entertained and the other e whatever it is. Who writes the story matters to me more than ever. I don’t want just a good story.
We’re really amidst a worldwide race to the bottom right now aren’t we?
If I detect that a website is using AI for it’s writing, I’m never returning? Got that Motor Trend? And yes, I do care about the art of thumbnails and topshots. Hell, the topshots here make up, what, 23% of my entertainment? I want real humans behind that shit.
MotorTrend didn’t need to admit anything, anyone could tell. There was a very noticeable cliff of quality when they started using AI.
“The Autopian’s critique of MotorTrend’s AI push is a timely reminder that authentic storytelling, deep technical insight, and cultural context are what make automotive journalism worth reading. When legacy outlets lean on AI without editorial rigor, they risk diluting the very passion that drives the enthusiast community. We need more voices that challenge the status quo and fight for quality over quantity—especially in a space built on emotion, engineering, and identity.”
-Microsoft Copilot.
See! It’s so obvious that even a dumb AI gets it!
Yes. Of course. Robots are definitely not reading this article. That is for sure. Definitely.
Another example that I ran across that has egregious errors indicative of AI:
https://www.jalopnik.com/1985408/mazda-new-skyactivz-engine/
The person who wrote it seems to have some background in cars at least. But not enough to know that the CX-50 Hybrid’s engine is from Toyota (like the rest of the hybrid system) and is not, in fact, a Skyactiv-G. It also happens to displace 2.5L which was enough fact checking I guess.
That the article got all of 4 comments and most of them were complaining about issues with it demonstrates the dead-site thing going on there.
They had a post the other day (I’m not going to bother searching for it) which stated something to the effect of, ‘you wouldn’t catch someone like Frank Sinatra in an Imperial!’
Sinatra in fact had his own, baby blue colored, version of the ’81 Imperial and did advertisements for it.
The actual Imperial being described was an older model, sure, but it just seemed to me that AI had associated Imperial with Sinatra and came up with an incorrect conclusion, and no human editor actually read the thing.
See this is what I like about the Autopian. If something like either my example or yours happened to slip by (however unlikely), the commentariat would light up (with love of course) whoever wrote it. It would be quickly edited.
The Jalopnik readers don’t even care anymore, and why should they when slop is being flung at them?
100% in agreement.
Also, I’m pretty sure nobody reads the comments over there because they are untenable. Political and personal attacks abound. The same thing happened at TTAC: even if the article is somewhat interesting, it just devolves into a cesspool of nasty childish comments. It’s a shame.
https://www.theautopian.com/a-reader-requested-new-el-camino-could-solve-the-ford-mavericks-biggest-problem/ is the reason why becoming a member was easy. I was the person who made the comment in Mercedes’ article and then the Bishop delivered.
Now THAT is fucking Autopian as hell!
Hell I’d rather use AI to write the article than have to spend time with Jonny Lieberman, so I can’t blame the man here. (Only joking on the AI part, Lieberman’s work and attitude is horrible)
Came here to invoke Lieberman as well.
I’d rather read AI generated content.
It’s more coherent.
There is no one in the automotive space that I detest more than Jonny effing Lieberman. What a douche.
This article is exactly why I started my membership today. Because I’m a cheap bastard, I’m only a vinyl member now… but ya gotta start somewhere, right?
Thanks to Matt, Jason, David, Mercedes, Adrian, Bishop, and all of the rest of the team here for making this a community we all want to engage in and support.
No notes.
Fine, you got a subscriber. Finally. More tail light content, please.
I’ve been a reader here since the site’s inception. Matt’s deep dive into how AI is killing the auto journalism industry is painfully true. If we the people want this, we gotta support them. It is their lifeblood.
We WANT to see the Autopian continue to thrive in an era of, as Matt so eloquently put it, slop.
I somehow stumbled here when there were approx 3 articles on the front page. And never went back to jalopnik etc. Times are stupid, it is time to act. Maybe late, but better late than never.
Thank you. I’ll have Jason prep a taillight blog right away!
Well, no one’s posted the Baruth article about Lieberman and Ed Loh so here it is:
https://www.avoidablecontact.com/p/about-this-jonny-lieberman-stupidity
With that background, this article is no surprise. Anyway keep doing what you’re doing Autopian crew.
Huh. Having spent quite a bit of time with both Baruth and Lieberman at car events, I would walk over 4 Jacks to hang out with Jonny.