Read this interesting story on the BBC, and it reads like one of the AI Facebook constructed stories I see all the time.
It does not mention ai and it does have a journalist name attached. Have we arrived at a place where journalists are apeing ai. Or am I just hallucinating;+)
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/czrekvml0p6o
Samay Raina's Still Alive: A moving second act of the 'cancelled' Indian comic

A misfired joke nearly derailed Samay Rainaโ€™s comedy career. Now heโ€™s back, reclaiming his voice.

@FSonder it's not just you. to me it reads as if someone filled in the gaps in a cunningly-constructed "mad libs". i suppose the writer could have just used a template?

But to me there's no sense of narrative structure.

@fishidwardrobe @FSonder I recently read an article about ESL writers being flagged as AI. Because AI has been trained on mainly "Queens English" texts, anyone writing in that strict style reads like AI (eg plethora of joining words, adverbs etc). I personally don't like the style, it reads like a GCSE essay to me, way too wordy. However many have been rigidly trained to write that way

@Havoc_online @FSonder agreed. this isn't really that, it's just that each paragraph flows very nicely from point to point, but those points don't lead you anywhere much.

of course this might just be a sign that the writer is spinning out what should have been two paragraphs into a whole article.

@fishidwardrobe @FSonder tbh thats what I felt - filling out to reach that essay word count!