Let’s be honest: IA content Sora is getting ridiculous
Let’s take two minutes of honesty.
Yes, Sora-generated video content is exploding.
But exploding… in stupidity.
We expected AI video to be a revolution.
We thought: finally, we’ll be able to tell better stories, explain better, create better.
And what do we see?
- Carrots doing kung-fu in a bamboo forest.
- A dog flying a jet fighter.
- Babies running on walls like it’s The Matrix.
- Ninja bananas blowing up inside Japanese temples.
Seriously.
This is the revolution?
“In 2024, 52% of businesses used AI video-generation tools in their content creation workflows.”
(Source: AI Video Creation: 2025 Statistics & Trends)
We have Sora — the most powerful video tool ever created —
…and we use it to generate nonsense.
And that pisses me off.
Because it proves one thing:
we have more technological power than human creativity.
IA content Sora creates noise, not meaning
This isn’t just “weird.”
It’s a real problem.
We’re creating a massive visual pollution layer.
People scroll, see something flashy, say “haha,” and forget it two seconds later.
It’s visual fast-food.
Emptiness wrapped in gold foil.
Eye-candy… without a brain behind it.
And of course, the algorithm wants more.
When spectacle becomes the norm, nothing has value anymore.
A real example with IA content Sora
This week, a small business I know posted three Sora-generated videos.
Technically perfect.
Emotionally dead.
Result?
➡️ 148 views
➡️ 0 clicks
➡️ 0 comments
➡️ 0 calls
A masterpiece… for no one.
We’re losing time, truth, and the human behind the IA content Sora
Let me be direct:
Sora-generated content is dehumanizing our feeds.
Or more accurately:
we’re letting AI replace real human stories with shiny nonsense.
Instead of:
- real stories
- useful insights
- meaningful education
We get… “perfect absurdity.”
A plastic universe.
A parade of fakes.
A constant noise that suffocates intention.
Meanwhile, algorithms can’t tell the difference between:
- a small business with something real to say
- a video of samurai carrots
It’s turning the feed into the social media equivalent of a Saturday-night doomscroll — just looking for “something that moves.”
And yet: the problem is NOT Sora
Sora is brilliant.
Revolutionary.
A technical marvel.
But Sora has no intention.
It simply amplifies what you ask of it.
Ask it for emptiness → it gives you spectacular emptiness.
Ask it for meaning → it helps you create more meaning.
Sora isn’t a creator.
It’s a multiplier.
So if the internet gets dumber…
it’s because we’re asking it to.
The public is saturated. Their threshold is gone
People are tired.
Their attention isn’t infinite.
Their patience even less.
“59.9% of consumers now distrust the authenticity of online content.”
(Source: Accenture Life Trends 2025 – via Sify)
You know what that means?
Our news feeds are becoming an all-you-can-eat buffet…
but with dishes no one actually wants.

And this is where small businesses have an incredible opportunity
The more absurd AI content becomes,
the more valuable real content becomes.
The more stupid videos go viral,
the rarer clarity becomes.
And rarity = power.
Small businesses don’t need to compete with absurd AI blockbusters.
They need to stay:
✔ human
✔ simple
✔ real
They can use Sora to:
- illustrate their services
- simplify their message
- produce faster — but not mindlessly
- amplify their authenticity
- make the invisible visible
A concrete example
A local small business using Sora to show its process, explain a complex idea, or visualize its expertise…
will get more real attention than a brand launching a CGI ninja-cat video.
Because real always beats noise.
In summary: less noise, more meaning
AI can create anything.
But it cannot make people stay.
That’s the job of humans.
Sora amplifies what you feed it.
If you feed it emptiness, you’ll produce spectacular emptiness.
If you feed it meaning, you’ll create impact.
Small businesses that use Sora to amplify intention —
not noise —
will be the ones who stand out.
Want to use AI without falling into the trap of absurd content?
Want to create something real, strong, and clear?
Contact the Nerds — let’s build something that actually matters to someone.

