The easy availability of powerful generative AI programs like ChatGPT, Gemini, and other image- and music-generation tools has given everyone the ability to instantly "create" any image, video, or song they can imagine. As the resulting flood of computer-made content washes up on shore, internet users and observers are calling it "slopcore."Also known as "AI slop," slopcore's aesthetic comes from people using AI as a collaborator instead of a tool, leaving the machines to make artistic choices. It's marked by the strangely off, the almost-real, and the uncanny vibe of machines imitating humanity. Slopcore often depicts deeply emotional subjects, but the lack of depth and insight make it uniquely disquieting.At first glance, slopcore photos and videos appear realistic, but a closer look reveals misplaced anatomy, impossible geometry, and a weird "sheen" that comes from surfaces being too smooth and lighting being too perfect. Slopcore music has the same vibe, in audible form. Instruments sound bland and mid and vocals sound eerie due to attempts to sound "emotional" but being disconnected from actual emotions. Here are some examples of slopcore videos: And here is "No More Slop," an example of slopcore music I generated in 45 seconds with Suno, and here are some slopcore images of protest singers generated by ChatGPT and Meta AI: Credit: ChatGPT, MetaAI Note the details that don't quite fit together—the guitar strap not attached to the guitar, the sign intersecting with the singer's head, the generic "AI font" used on the sign, the extra foot on the guitarist to the left—these are all signs of slopcore. While generative AI programmers are working hard to create models that don't add fingers and limbs, some appreciate Slopcore because of its flaws and the uniquely disquieting, uncanny valley feeling they evoke. If you look past the mawkishness and hallucinations, AI slop shows a vision of a likely future where nearly everything is made by machines, and hardly anyone can tell the difference.