WANDSWORTH, London. June 10th, 2026 – BearJam examines why judgment, narrative skill, and human-led direction are becoming the real markers of quality as AI tools become widely available across the industry.
With AI video production tools now widely used by brands, agencies, and creators, BearJam, a video production company, argues that the gap between good and bad content is no longer about access to technology. It is about the quality of creative decision making.
AI-generated content continues to grow in volume, and the phrase “AI slop” is increasingly used to describe work that feels repetitive, generic, and visually uninspired.
This often comes from teams relying too heavily on prompts and automation without the creative understanding needed to produce content that genuinely connects with audiences.
The issue is not limited access to AI. The real challenge is the lack of consistent creative standards across teams using it.
BearJam’s approach to AI video production is grounded in experience delivering campaigns for brands such as KGM and SD Worx. Their view is that tools alone do not make effective work. Taste does.
In creative video production, BearJam defines taste as:
- Real storytelling instinct
- Strong pacing decisions
- Emotional awareness
- Visual judgment
- Knowing what to exclude
- Keeping creative control human led
- Understanding audience response
- Knowing when AI adds value and when it does not
This philosophy is reflected in the company’s structure. BearJam recently appointed Brick Ng as AI Architect, a role focused on integrating AI into production while preserving human creative leadership.
AI is now central to BearJam’s workflow, but human creativity remains the guiding force.
James Hilditch, founder and creative director of BearJam, said, “I’m genuinely excited by what AI has done for our industry. It’s opened up ideas we couldn’t have afforded to make a few years ago, sped up the parts of production that used to slow everyone down, and given smaller brands a real shot at ambitious work.
That’s a good thing, and we lean into it every day. But it comes with a catch.
The easier it gets to make video, the easier it gets to make forgettable video. When teams let the tools do the thinking, you end up with content that’s technically fine and creatively empty, and audiences notice every time.
So our priority hasn’t shifted. AI takes on more of the heavy lifting each month, but the storytelling, the pacing, the decisions about what actually moves someone, those stay human.
That’s the part that makes a video worth watching, and it’s the part we won’t hand over.”
As demand for faster and lower cost content increases, production companies are receiving more AI focused briefs than ever.
However, agencies that depend too heavily on automation risk producing work that performs poorly and weakens brand perception.
Audiences continue to expect originality and personality. Without human direction, AI content becomes easier to identify, easier to dismiss, and easier to criticise.
The concern is not falling behind on AI adoption. The real risk is creative sameness across the industry when human judgment is removed.
For BearJam, the future is not about replacing creatives with tools. It is about hybrid workflows where AI supports production and humans lead creative direction.
“AI will keep getting better. That was never the question. The real one is whether you’ve still got someone with taste deciding what to point it at.” – James Hilditch




