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Interrogating the Future: An AI Confession
“The suspect knew too much about AI.
Or maybe… she just knew how to answer the right questions.”
Check out the recorded Pod Cast Here: Interrogating the future
How It All Began
It started as a simple reflection, ten questions about how AI is shaping my design work.
But instead of writing a straight blog, I found myself drawn to something more atmospheric.
Something that felt like the process itself, shadowy, uncertain, full of creative tension.
So, I turned the reflection into a crime-show-style interrogation, complete with tape recorder hums, flickering lights, and a narrator whose voice demanded answers.
The irony? Every part of the production was built with AI.
The words, the sound, the visuals, even the interrogation room itself, were all digitally generated and then manually composed by me.
Built by AI, Crafted by Hand
I started by feeding the ten questions into ChatGPT, but instead of plain responses, I asked for a script.
Together, we created a dialogue between a suspicious interrogator and me — a learning designer “accused” of collaborating with Artificial Intelligence.
Then came the layers:
- Voice: generated using AI text-to-speech, giving each character a distinct tone and rhythm.
- Sound Effects: sourced and blended through AI-assisted sound libraries; tape clicks, fluorescent hums.
- Images: created with AI image generation and enhanced in Photoshop’s Generative Expand to build the noir interrogation room.
- Editing: every frame and cue assembled manually — timed to each pause, each flicker, each breath.
It wasn’t just automation, it was orchestration.
Why Noir?
Noir has always been about truth hiding in plain sight.
It’s smoky, suspicious, human.
And that’s exactly how AI feels right now, part mystery, part revelation.
The interrogation format gave me a way to ask the big questions:
Is AI saving us time or stealing our craft?
Can it really understand empathy, context, and culture?
Or is it just pretending well enough to fool us — and our learners?
The Real Interrogation
Behind the theatrics, the project became a metaphor for the design process itself.
Every day, learning designers interrogate ideas:
“What’s the story here?”
“What does the learner need?”
“Is this real, or just noise?”
AI doesn’t replace that questioning, it amplifies it.
It’s like having an endless brainstorm partner who never sleeps, never stops suggesting, and occasionally hands you brilliance on a platter.
The Craft of Collaboration
What fascinated me most was the balance.
AI built the assets — but I gave them shape.
It’s a partnership that works best when humans stay in control of tone, meaning, and emotional truth.
“AI gave me the pieces.
But I had to make them make sense.”
That’s the new creative muscle, knowing when to hand over, when to edit, and when to override.
Lessons from the Interrogation Room
By the end, I realised the project wasn’t about AI at all, it was about agency.
The ability to stay curious, playful, and skeptical, even when technology feels all-knowing.
If AI has a role in the future of learning design, it’s not to automate creativity, it’s to augment it.
To make space for designers to ask better questions, faster.
To amplify storytelling, not silence it.
Final Word
So yes, I built my own interrogation.
I wrote the script with AI.
I voiced it with AI.
I scored, illustrated, and expanded it with AI.
And then I did what no algorithm could:
I stitched it all together with intuition, timing, and story sense.
Because creativity isn’t about the tools you use.
It’s about what you do with them.
4 Replies
- ilgunapoCommunity Member
I absolutely love how you not only explained, but also demonstrated through your work where AI is effective versus where human orchestration is still essential. The interrogation room concept was also really clever. Overall, very inspiring work!
- SuperSuzeCommunity Member
Thank you
- CamiliaSCommunity Member
Wow, so well done!!
- VhantzCommunity Member
This is amazing and I loooooooooooove that you used AI to create this project! Its really cool!