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Can AI Ever Replace Human Storytelling? (Spoiler: Not Even Close) | Melanie Deziel, Creative Systems Architect, Keynote Speaker & Author
Season 2 · Episode 12

Can AI Ever Replace Human Storytelling? (Spoiler: Not Even Close) | Melanie Deziel, Creative Systems Architect, Keynote Speaker & Author

Pipe Dream | A B2B Marketing Podcast

February 4, 202623m 4s

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Show Notes

Can AI create great content? Sure. Can it create content that actually moves people? That’s the question at the heart of this episode, where host Jason Bradwell sits down with Melanie Deziel, former (and first-ever) editor of branded content at The New York Times and author of The Content Fuel Framework and Prove It, to explore what makes content truly defensible in the age of AI.

Melanie looks back on her NYT work and explains why the most memorable branded content leans into experiences AI can’t replicate. She points to projects built on real reporting; interviewing people, gathering lived stories, capturing sensory detail, and earning emotional truth. ChatGPT can’t call someone up, build trust, or understand the texture of human experience firsthand. The more human your content is, the safer it is from commoditisation.

The conversation then turns to Prove It and the reality that skepticism was already at an all-time high before AI went mainstream where fake news, deepfakes, and “alternative facts” made audiences harder to convince. Now, with synthetic content everywhere, empty claims are even easier to dismiss. Melanie’s argument is simple: the brands that win won’t just say things they’ll prove them with evidence, specifics, and credible support that goes beyond generic marketing language.

Jason asks about AI ethics, and Melanie draws a parallel to the early days of sponsored content labeling. Her view is that disclosure matters because trust matters but the bigger test is whether the content genuinely adds value. AI-assisted work can still be meaningful if it’s transparent enough and actually useful.

On creativity, Melanie argues that while AI can generate unlimited ideas, it often produces similar outputs when everyone uses the same tools and prompts. What makes ideas interesting is the fuel AI can’t access, your memories, curiosity, experiences, and perspective. That’s why she still believes structured creativity beats random brainstorming: a strong process consistently produces better work than chasing “inspiration.”

Melanie also shares how she uses AI in practice: speeding up research, checking blind spots and biases, and acting like a verbal processing partner without outsourcing the actual strategic thinking or full creative execution. She wants AI to buy back time so she can do more of what she loves: creating.

Chapter Markers

00:00 - Introduction: Defining modern branded content

02:00 - What makes content defensible in the AI age

04:00 - Buyer skepticism and the Prove It framework

06:00 - The ethics of AI-generated content

09:00 - When AI helps creativity vs flattens it

13:00 - How Melanie actually uses ChatGPT

15:00 - Building multiple forms of media and IP

18:00 - Creative side quests and pulling threads

21:00 - Divergent vs convergent thinking

23:00 - Advice for risk-averse marketing cultures

Useful Links

Connect with Jason Bradwell on LinkedIn

Connect with Melanie Deziel on LinkedIn 

Explore Melanie’s website melaniedeziel.com

Visit Creative Constructs

Explore B2B Better website and the Pipe Dream podcast