OpenAI CEO Sam Altman has a message for creatives anxious about artificial intelligence replacing their jobs — relax, but also get ready to level up. In a recent YouTube podcast with Indian entrepreneur Varun Mayya, Altman shared his take on how AI is reshaping the creative landscape, why fears of complete job loss may be exaggerated, and what the future of work might look like in an AI-driven world. Continues below advertisement window.
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display("div-gpt-ad-9167143-2"); }); },ad_unit_fire_time) }); AI Will Shift, Not Erase, Creative Roles Altman didn’t sugarcoat the fact that some jobs may vanish. “There will be some jobs that totally go away, where the AI does them end-to-end,” he acknowledged. But he stressed that most creative work will evolve rather than disappear.
“Mostly, I think it’ll be a case of a new tool that makes people more productive and raises the quality of work.” Continues below advertisement window.addEventListener("load", function() { let ad_unit_fire_time = 1000; if(ad_delay_time_abp > 0){ ad_unit_fire_time = parseInt(ad_delay_time_abp) + 500; } setTimeout(function () { googletag.
cmd.push(function() { googletag.display("div-gpt-ad-1253031-3"); }); },ad_unit_fire_time) }); He pointed to areas like graphic design and user interface (UI) work as fields where human creativity still plays a vital role.
While AI can handle repetitive tasks or offer faster iterations, the artistic eye and taste of a human remain crucial. “You’ll still need people making a website look great, but expectations will go up and we’ll get better stuff. Maybe demand increases,” Altman said.
Say Hello to Jobs You’ve Never Heard Of In an era where ChatGPT and DALL·E are household names, the job market is already morphing to accommodate new roles. Altman highlighted one of AI’s most recent career contributions — prompt engineering. “Before AI, that job didn’t exist and was hard to even imagine,” he noted.
These emerging roles reflect how technological disruption doesn’t just eliminate jobs — it creates them, often in forms we couldn’t have predicted. Reflecting on his own path, Altman shared how tech jobs were once seen as low-status. “When I was young, I wanted to study computer programming.
Adults around me said, ‘That’s a hobby job. Be a doctor or a lawyer, get a real job.’ But I felt I understood something they didn’t,” he recalled.
His takeaway: don’t underestimate today’s niche jobs — they may be tomorrow’s power careers. “Just because something isn't a high-status job today doesn’t mean it won’t be tomorrow. That’s the nature of technological progress.
” Art, AI, and the Ghibli-style Controversy The conversation also touched on a heated topic in creative circles — AI-generated art. A recent surge of Studio Ghibli-inspired AI images on social media has reignited debates about whether machine-made visuals are diluting artistic integrity. Altman’s view? Technology has expanded access to creativity, even if it’s not without its flaws.
“I think the democratisation of creating content has been a big net win for society,” he said. “It has not been a complete win, there are negative things about it for sure, and certainly it did something about the art form, but I think on the whole it’s been a win.” While Altman doesn’t deny the disruptions AI brings, his message is clear: creative jobs aren’t vanishing — they’re transforming.
And those who evolve with the tools may find themselves not replaced, but in even higher demand..
AI Won’t Kill Creative Jobs, But Will Make Them Better: OpenAI Chief Sam Altman Weighs In

OpenAI CEO Sam Altman has a message for creatives anxious about artificial intelligence replacing their jobs — relax, but also get ready to level up. In a recent YouTube podcast with Indian entrepreneur Varun Mayya, Altman shared his take on how AI is reshaping the creative landscape, why fears of complete job loss may be exaggerated, and what the future of work might look like in an AI-driven world.AI Will Shift, Not Erase, Creative RolesAltman didn’t sugarcoat the fact that some jobs may vanish. “There will be some jobs that totally go away, where the AI does them end-to-end,” he acknowledged. But he stressed that most creative work will evolve rather than disappear. “Mostly, I think it’ll be a case of a new tool that makes people more productive and raises the quality of work.”He pointed to areas like graphic design and user interface (UI) work as fields where human creativity still plays a vital role. While AI can handle repetitive tasks or offer faster iterations, the artistic eye and taste of a human remain crucial. “You’ll still need people making a website look great, but expectations will go up and we’ll get better stuff. Maybe demand increases,” Altman said.Say Hello to Jobs You’ve Never Heard OfIn an era where ChatGPT and DALL·E are household names, the job market is already morphing to accommodate new roles. Altman highlighted one of AI’s most recent career contributions — prompt engineering. “Before AI, that job didn’t exist and was hard to even imagine,” he noted. These emerging roles reflect how technological disruption doesn’t just eliminate jobs — it creates them, often in forms we couldn’t have predicted.Reflecting on his own path, Altman shared how tech jobs were once seen as low-status. “When I was young, I wanted to study computer programming. Adults around me said, ‘That’s a hobby job. Be a doctor or a lawyer, get a real job.’ But I felt I understood something they didn’t,” he recalled.His takeaway: don’t underestimate today’s niche jobs — they may be tomorrow’s power careers. “Just because something isn't a high-status job today doesn’t mean it won’t be tomorrow. That’s the nature of technological progress.”Art, AI, and the Ghibli-style ControversyThe conversation also touched on a heated topic in creative circles — AI-generated art. A recent surge of Studio Ghibli-inspired AI images on social media has reignited debates about whether machine-made visuals are diluting artistic integrity.Altman’s view? Technology has expanded access to creativity, even if it’s not without its flaws. “I think the democratisation of creating content has been a big net win for society,” he said. “It has not been a complete win, there are negative things about it for sure, and certainly it did something about the art form, but I think on the whole it’s been a win.”While Altman doesn’t deny the disruptions AI brings, his message is clear: creative jobs aren’t vanishing — they’re transforming. And those who evolve with the tools may find themselves not replaced, but in even higher demand.