Comment by 🐙 norayr
i always have em-dash at my fingertips because i have an armenian keyboard, and em-dash is used for speech in armenian typography.
so it was always easy for me to use it with english as well.
here, i have hyphen, dash, and armenian hyphen(yentamna): -, —, ֊ (:
Mar 31 · 5 weeks ago
6 Later Comments ↓
🦋 CarloMonte · Mar 31 at 20:01:
oh, now i remenber the old books. em-dash was used for dialogues in romanian typography, too. nowadays it is often replaced with a normal dash. also gone are paired quotation marks, the small space before : and ; and much more.
em dash is still used for quotes in spanish books, in my experience
🚀 stack [OP] · Apr 01 at 01:17:
In the Soviet Union they used dashes for quoted speech as well. It took some getting used to quote marks.
🏍️ Atomic-Germ · Apr 02 at 22:39:
I just think it's goofy when people are completely obvious about their influences. Specifically it's the irony of being mad that AI imitates us while actively imitating it
🏍️ Atomic-Germ · Apr 02 at 22:43:
Not to be cynical but...
For the most part people are just meme regurgitation and trend replication machines. Almost everyone is consumer-only aside from short form video intended for people who already know them...
So what's the difference? Bad writing is bad writing regardless of the author, and good writing is good whether it was by a dog or a stone, or a few stones with lightning in them. I just can't bring myself to care.
🏍️ Atomic-Germ · Apr 02 at 22:44:
Typing two "-" gives you the em dash too on a lot of systems. It isn't an AI trait anyway it's just a normal English thing
Original Post
AI Slop Everywhere — Everything I watch and hear feels flattened, processed, and eerily uniform—like it was drafted by the same invisible system optimizing for clarity, engagement, and neutrality. The voices are polished, predictable, and frictionless, delivering tidy arcs and prepackaged insights with just enough variation to seem human, but never enough to surprise, inspire or awe. There’s always that signature rhythm—the em dash pivot, the triad of descriptors, the carefully hedged claim—...