Michael Patrick King Warns AI Is an 'Extinction Event' for Human Creativity – New 'The Comeback' Season Targets Automation
Breaking: 'The Comeback' Creator Warns AI Could End Human Writing
Michael Patrick King, co-creator of the cult HBO series The Comeback, has issued a stark warning: artificial intelligence may become an extinction event for human creativity. In an exclusive interview, the 71-year-old writer-director stated that the entertainment industry's rush toward automation is not just a threat to jobs but to the very essence of storytelling.

King's comments come as the third season of The Comeback premieres, with star Valerie Cherish (Lisa Kudrow) agreeing to star in a sitcom secretly written by AI. 'It's the bleakest punch line yet,' King said. 'We're not warning about rogue technology – we're examining the human appetite that makes this displacement possible.'
Background: A Decade-Spanning Satire of Hollywood
The Comeback debuted in 2005, skewering the rise of reality TV. A 2014 revival targeted prestige cable auteurs and television's so-called golden age. Now, its third season tackles AI head-on, mirroring real-world anxieties about automation in writing rooms.
King's career includes creating HBO's Sex and the City and its sequel And Just Like That…, as well as CBS's 2 Broke Girls. But he considers The Comeback his sharpest work. The show follows washed-up actress Valerie Cherish's relentless pursuit of relevance across three seasons, each arriving roughly a decade apart.
In the interview, King also reflected on his upbringing in Scranton, Pennsylvania, and praised fellow Scranton native Stephen Karam, playwright of The Humans. He joked about local hero Jason Miller, who wrote That Championship Season and played the priest in The Exorcist. 'People ask why I don't have a plaque in Scranton,' King quipped. 'I guess I never defeated the devil.'
What This Means: Creativity Under Siege
King's warning arrives amid a wave of AI anxiety in Hollywood. HBO's Hacks recently aired an anti-LLM episode. But The Comeback approaches the topic from a darker, more uncomfortable angle, focusing on the human greed that fuels technological displacement.
While some see AI as a tool for efficiency, King argues it could become a crutch that erases the need for original writing. 'If we let machines do the creative work, we risk losing the very thing that makes stories human,' he said. The show's satire underscores that urgency, making audiences question their own complicity in a system that prioritizes profit over artistry.
For writers and creators, the message is clear: the fight to preserve human creativity is not just a labor issue – it's a cultural imperative. As King's work demonstrates, the most powerful resistance may come from storytelling itself, lampooning the forces that threaten it.
Read more about the interview and King's thoughts on Scranton playwrights here.
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