Morehouse College professor Kim Ford reframes artificial intelligence as a productivity partner-one that rewards creators who learn how to use it wisely rather than fear it.
In classrooms and newsrooms alike, artificial intelligence is often framed as a threat-an encroaching force poised to replace human creativity. But according to Kim Ford, an entertainment journalism professor at Morehouse College, that framing misses the point entirely.
“The first thing you have to understand is that Al is not your enemy,” Ford explains, drawing a clear parallel to earlier waves of disruption. When the internet emerged, critics dismissed it as a fad-too abstract, too impersonal, too different from familiar tools like phone calls and handwritten letters. Yet history proved otherwise. Email didn’t erase communication; it expanded it. In the same way, Ford argues, Al is simply the next evolution-one that creators can either resist or harness.
Used correctly, Al can function as an assistant rather than a substitute. It helps with prompts, organization, research leads, and early drafts-freeing writers and filmmakers to focus on judgment, voice, and depth. “Once you understand and learn how to use it to your advantage, it actually makes your life easier,” Ford says. “You can be more productive.”
That productivity gap matters. In Ford’s view, the writers who will thrive aren’t those who outsource their thinking to algorithms, but those who use Al strategically to enhance their workflow. “Al is not your enemy-the writers who learn to use it as an assistant will outwork the ones who don’t,” she notes. The difference isn’t talent; it’s efficiency. A creator who once produced five solid stories a week may now produce fifteen, using Al to handle the trivial tasks while reserving human insight for what truly matters.
Still, Ford respects dissent. She recounts a student who refuses to use Al at all, aspiring to become a hip-hop film critic in the mold of Touré. Ford supports that choice-while encouraging experimentation. Try both approaches, she advises, and let the results speak.
The takeaway isn’t blind adoption. It’s informed engagement. Al can surface angles you hadn’t considered, spark deeper reporting, and accelerate output-but only if guided by human intention. In an era of Al-generated commercials and virtual influencers, Ford’s message is clear: embrace the tool, master it, and let humanity lead.




