Michael Parkinsonâs son defends new AI podcast
Sir Michael Parkinsonâs son has defended the use of AI to recreate the voice of the late chat show host for a new interview podcast series.
Virtually Parkinson has been produced by Deep Fusion Films with the backing of Sir Michaelâs family and estate.
The eight-episode series will see the Barnsley-born broadcaster, who died last year aged 88, interact with a string of new guests.
Speaking to BBC Radio 4âs Today, his son Mike Parkinson said he told producers he âreally wanted to it to be clear [to listeners] it was an AI iterationâ.
However, the podcastâs release comes at a time when the use of AI in creative arts is being hotly debated, with many arguing it needs to be used carefully and ethically, if at all.
Many broadcasters and screen actors are concerned about the risk AI poses to their livelihoods, as well as the complications around AI being mistaken by the public for the real person or product.
In 2022, the union Equity launched a âStop AI Stealing the Showâ campaign. The use of AI was a major factor in the strikes that brought Hollywood to a standstill last year.
However, as Sir Michael is dead and therefore no longer has a livelihood to protect, the debate in this case is more about whether or not it is ethical to have him say things he never said in real life, and also whether AI versions of real hosts is something listeners even want.
Mike Parkinson said Deep Fusionâs co-creators Ben Field and Jamie Anderson âare 100% very ethical in their approach towards it, they are very aware of the legal and ethical issues, and they will not try to pass this off as realâ.
Recalling how the podcast was developed, Parkinson said: âBefore he died, we [my father and I] talked about doing a podcast, and unfortunately he passed away before it came true, which is where Deep Fusion came in.
âI came to them and said, âif we wanted to do this podcast with my father talking about his archive, is it possible?â, and they said âitâs more than possible, we think we can do something moreâ.
He added his father âwould have been fascinatedâ by the project, although noted the broadcaster himself was a âtechnophobeâ.
Discussing the new AI version of his father, Parkinson said: âItâs extraordinary what theyâve achieved, because I didnât really think it was going to be as accurate as that.â
Anderson, who was being interviewed alongside Parkinson, added: âI donât think itâs about being better.
âThe AI Michael is not replacing a presenter, it is a new podcast where Sir Michaelâs legacy has continued. So itâs not taking away a presenterâs job.â
This point will be disputed by many of todayâs presenters. If a celebrity guest agrees to be interviewed by the AI Sir Michael, that arguably removes the opportunity for a different interview which could have been conducted by a living journalist.
âNoteworthy guestsâ
Parkinson said one of his motivations was to âfind a new, younger audience, one that possibly wasnât aware of what my father could doâ.
âItâs a wonderful way of extending the life of someone who was an outlier and a unique talent of his generation,â he added.
Explaining how the podcast would work, Anderson said: âThese are brand new interviews, and the AI weâve created is as close to the late Sir Michael as we could possibly get it.
âHe is autonomous, so we let him start the interview and after that it is up to AI Sir Michael, who is trained on Sir Michaelâs style and the interview questions.
He added: âWe canât tell you the guests yet, we have a few slots remaining, but they are notable, noteworthy people.â
Sir Michaelâs TV career spanned seven decades, and he interviewed the worldâs biggest stars on his long-running chat show, which ran on the BBC and later ITV.