The launch of ChatGPT Images 2.0 has sparked controversy among graphic designers as AI-generated graphics go viral, leading to concerns about job security. Many designers express confusion and defensiveness over the negative perception of their work compared to AI art.
On April 21, the new ChatGPT Images 2.0 launched, enhancing the softwareâs ability to create AI-generated graphics. In the immediate aftermath, graphics made by the OpenAI product went viral on social media, with many disparaging human graphic designers.
âYeah man designers are about to be jobless,â one X user wrote on a post alongside AI-generated jersey swaps of soccer players Lamine Yamal and Eduardo Camavinga, which garnered more than 7,000 likes.
These posts left some graphic designers confused, and even defensive, about why people were demeaning their careers.
âThe fact that people are out there defending legitimate robots is beyond me,â John Osborn, who has done design work with Bleacher Report and Electronic Arts, tells Front Office Sports.
Osborn, who says he âloves negativity toward AI,â has built up 17,000 X followers with his sports designs. AI social media discourse made its way into the pro sports sphere as well, with various teams like the Timberwolves, Borussia Dortmund, and the Saints denouncing AI art.
But amid anti-AI sentiment coming from other sports teams, several major franchises were quietly using it. The Indiana Fever were criticized after Caitlin Clark joked about a graphic that mangled her hand with an AI tool. Though the NHLâs Jets and Blues denounced AI graphics online, the Jets told FOS that they plan on incorporating AI in future creative content, while a source told FOS that the Blues do the same.
Sports designers who spoke with FOS believe their expertise and skill will not be replicated by AIâat least for now. The concern is, in an era of consolidating and cost-cutting, whether their bosses value their work in the same way.
Jason Matheson, director of college sports creative talent headhunter SkullSparks, tells FOS that in the wake of teams being cut now that schools can pay athletes directly, he worries college creatives could also fall victim. Cal Athletics already laid off dozens of its employees in its marketing and communications department and replaced it with the new Strawberry Creek Studiosâwith roles that former Cal employees were encouraged to apply for.
âThere are a lot of athletic departments that I donât think really value designers and creatives, because a lot of them have a bad mindset of âitâs an honor for you to work for us,ââ Johnny Smiley, Oklahoma athleticsâs director of creative content, tells FOS. âI [could] see some of the smaller schools, like the ones youâre seeing cut sports, think that AI is a solution to their problem, but I think theyâll learn through trial and error that theyâve probably created more problems for themselves.â
AI is often error-prone. But even if it became spotless, it cannot replace a graphic that emotionally resonates with fans, designers say.
Smiley brings up the example of a post he made celebrating Oklahoma softball for breaking the NCAA single-season home run record, which required extensive specific knowledge of each of the players involved, from their handedness to their celebrations.
âI put a lot of weight on my shoulders to make graphics that make people feel good about the brand they represent,â Smiley says. âAnd thatâs the thing I hate about AI the most, people are trying to take out that human nature.â
Both Osborn and Smiley think AI-generated art lacks the distinct identity that a designer brings. Many AI graphics take on the same âgrungyâ style with a âspray-painted fontâ that lacks originality, Smiley notes.
âSure, you could have somebody put in some very specific prompts and come back with a specific-looking image,â Matheson says. âHowever, itâs soulless.â
Osborn says Bleacher Report and EA are not supportive of AI art. According to Smiley, Oklahoma doesnât have a specific generative AI policy, but he says nobody in the athletic department uses it for graphic design.
Bleacher Report, EA, and Oklahoma did not immediately answer questions about their generative AI policies.
However, designers worry that not every team or organization will care the same way about human art. Smiley recalls asking four menâs basketball recruits whether his graphic made a difference to them; all said no.
The real concern lies in where the industry will be years down the road if AIâs capabilities growâor if budgets shrink.
âI donât think that it will ever directly be able to do exactly what I do, but itâll get pretty dang close, and people wonât really have much of an option in a few years when it comes to budgetary reasons or just the speed of which it can create things,â Osborn says. âIâm worried of the fact that there will be some cultural shift that people are just like, âWe give up, weâre just going to start using AI.ââ
Thereâs also the question of how much AI is âacceptableâ to designers.
Certain AI tools on Photoshop, like Generative Fill, are still frequently used by designers. Osborn says he is a âtraditionalâ designer who wonât use AI at all. But Matheson and Smiley are both open to experimenting with tools, with the former believing that utilizing AI in some capacity is required to get ahead of the curve.
When too many of these distinctions regarding what is acceptable are made, things can get murky.
âI donât know if thereâs ever going to be any proper terminology, because weâre all just learning about this stuff as we go on,â Smiley says. âAre we ever going to have an actual line drawn? What is bad AI, what is good AI?â
The post How Sports Graphic Designers Are Grappling With the Rise of AI Art appeared first on Front Office Sports.
ChatGPT Images 2.0 is an AI tool that enhances the creation of graphics, leading to concerns among graphic designers about job security as AI-generated images gain popularity.
Several sports teams, including the Timberwolves, Borussia Dortmund, and the Saints, have publicly denounced AI art, highlighting the ongoing debate in the sports graphic design community.
Graphic designers are expressing confusion and defensiveness regarding the negative comments about their work, with some like John Osborn embracing the discourse around AI.
AI-generated graphics have gone viral on social media, leading to disparaging comments about human designers, which has sparked a broader conversation about the value of traditional graphic design.

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