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Generative ‘Artificial Intelligence’ or A.I. has been quite the controversy of late rearing its head in everything from environmental issues to space flight and theoretical orbital data centers. For the creative fields the fights and arguments have been very intense centered on the data that had been used, without permission of the owners or creators, to train the machine learning systems. This has led to swaths of ‘novels’ being produced by A.I. and a deep and powerful backlash against any art that has A.I. as part of the process. Like all backlashes, it is far too easy for things to escalate to proportions all out of measure.
Now, I myself have absolutely no interest in any ‘art’ that is A.I.-generated. The entire point of a poem or a story is that you are experiencing another person’s viewpoint, that, for the time you are immersed in that piece of art, you are seeing, however dimly, through another person’s eyes and experiencing the world as they interpret it. This is something that cannot be achieved without self-aware consciousness. It requires the ability to wonder, to dream, to imagine and A.I., outside of science-fiction, cannot do that.
That does not mean that A.I. has no place, it is a tool and a powerful one. Let me show you how I used A.I. to solve a problem I had while drafting the novel that is currently trying to find representation.
After getting some feedback on the book’s opening pages I started revising the first scenes where the reader meets the protagonist. The novel is set in San Diego, 1984, at the start of summer. To show Dave’s nature and to give him an early goal before horror derailed his life I decided that he would have a plan to acquire a second theater, opening it as another art house and as a sanctuary for gay and queer young people.
I have lived in San Diego since 1982, and I wanted the novel to be grounded in the city I knew. I was not interested in inventing businesses or locals that did not exist. The theater that Dave owns in the novel is a real one, and one that was beloved to me, the fiction was that this character owned it, not its existence. So, the second theater would also need to be something that was real in San Diego of 1984.
In the early 80s at the corner of Park Boulevard and University Ave sat an old movie palace that had been converted into an ‘adult’ theater. I visited it while I was still in the U.S. Navy, found the pornographic films not to my taste and did not visit that theater again until the 1990s when Landmark had acquired it and transformed it into an Art House showing foreign and revival films. This would be the perfect acquisition for Dave. He could rescue the theater from its degraded state and make it into something glorious and elevated.
My problem, I could not remember the name of the theater as it operated in the 80s. As an Art House it hadn’t survived past the 90s, home video had killed the revival market in San Diego, and even the building was gone, replaced with mixed use residential and retail spaces. I could simply invent the name of the theater and what it looked like but that flew against the way I wanted this novel to work. Simply ‘googling’ for the movie theater at that location provided very scattered and not at all helpful results.
Here is where A.I., specifically Claude, came in very helpful. I asked Claude to find information on the history of the theater at that location and it returned the name that it had operated under both as a movie palace and as an ‘adult’ theater, The Capri.
Ah, but A.I. can very confidentially give you answers that it has invented out of whole cloth. So you cannot trust its responses alone. But now, armed with the name of the theater, I could make my own much better targeted search for information. That yielded a wonderful KPBS article that not only detailed the history of the place, the names of the people who owned it as an ‘adult’ theater, when Landmark acquired it, but also had photographs that revived my memory, allowing me to picture it in my mind.
Armed with this, much more than what I required, I crafted the scene, achieving everything I had wanted in it. A.I. made writing the scene as I wanted it to be possible but every sentence, every word came from my brain and my desire to paint a picture for the reader. There is a use for A.I. but it is not to create but to assist in creation.



