Amy Poehler vs. the AI ‘Actress’ Is the Unexpected Feud We Didn’t Know We Needed
There’s something oddly comforting about watching Amy Poehler roast a robot — or something like a robot.
During Saturday Night Live’s 50th anniversary episode, Poehler slipped one quick line into her opening monologue that summed up an entire industry’s panic attack: “You’ll never be able to write a joke, you stupid robot,” she told Tilly Norwood — or, more accurately, the idea of Tilly Norwood, the AI “actress” that’s been giving Hollywood the collective ick all month.
For anyone just tuning in, Tilly isn’t real. She’s a computer-generated “ingenue” created by Eline Van der Velden’s company, Particle6, and unveiled at the Zurich Film Festival earlier this month. Van der Velden casually mentioned that Tilly would soon be represented by an agency, and that was all it took. Within days, the internet was ablaze with nihilistic takes on the new “actress.” Agents were alarmed. Actors were furious. Economists were writing essays about her. One of them, Tyler Cowen, even called her his favorite actress, which — deep breath — was weird.
Poehler’s joke landed because it said out loud what so many people have been trying to intellectualize into oblivion. Before she took the swing, she reminded the crowd that when SNL first aired in 1975, women couldn’t even get credit cards. Then she pivoted to the AI “actress” taking up headlines.
What makes Tilly feel different from past experiments like virtual influencers is that she’s being treated like a person. Variety reported that major agencies’ interest in representing an AI actor felt, to many in the industry, like a line had been crossed. Tilly isn’t just a pretty face on a screen; she’s a projection of every fear about automation and creative labor that’s been simmering since the strikes.
And let’s be real: this isn’t just a Hollywood problem. Apps like OpenAI’s Sora 2 can already make hyperrealistic videos on demand, giving anyone the ability to create their own “stars” without hiring a soul. Synthetic influencers and algorithms have already quietly taken over corners of the internet. What’s happening on red carpets and talent rosters is just the glossy version of something that’s been happening in our feeds for a while.
As she closed with her perfectly ridiculous sign-off, Poehler addressed the AI actress directly: “And to that little AI robot watching TV right now who wants to be on this stage someday, I say to you — beep boop beep boop. Which translates to: ‘You’ll never be able to write a joke, you stupid robot.’ And I am willing to do full frontal, but nobody’s asked me, okay!”
The robots may be learning fast. But so far, they still can’t tell a good joke.
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