
Identity Slop: The Rise of Synthetic Media Experts
The Future of You
Discovery of Fake Experts
Rob Waugh recounts how he first found fabricated media experts and the initial oddities that revealed they weren't real.
What if the expert quoted in the story doesn’t exist?
Jesse Chambers is quoted across British newspapers as a travel expert, offering advice on everything from cruise ships to long-haul flights.
There is just one problem.
She doesn’t exist.
In this episode of Me:chine Dialogues, Tracey Follows speaks with journalist Rob Waugh about the emergence of synthetic experts: fabricated identities designed to supply quotes, authority, and credibility within media systems.
Me:chine Dialogues is a special series from The Future of You exploring identity, agency, and AI-mediated systems — where the machinable and unmachinable selves meet.
What begins as a curious case opens into something much larger. These are not isolated errors or instances of misinformation. They point to a structural shift in how identity is produced and used.
Tracey introduces the concept of identity slop: the moment when personal identity becomes commoditised, scalable, and generated to meet the needs of AI-mediated information systems.
If expertise can be generated, identity can be fabricated.
And if identity can be fabricated, authority itself can be automated.
This conversation explores what happens next: for trust, for authorship, and for the human self inside increasingly synthetic systems.
Key Ideas
- Identity Slop synthetic identity as low-cost, scalable content
- Synthetic Experts fabricated authority inserted into media systems
- Machine-Readable Identity selves optimised for system consumption
- AI-Mediated Information Systems environments that generate and reward synthetic identity
You can find more about this topic through Rob’s work at Press Gazette
Visit:
→ Me:chine World and essays: me-chine.com
→ Podcast archive The Future of You
→ Audiobook series (weekly chapters) Introduction
About Tracey Follows
Tracey Follows is a futurist specialising in identity, agency, and the relationship between systems and selves in an AI-mediated world.
Her work includes the frameworks Systems & Self, Identity as Infrastructure, and Me:chine exploring the machinable and unmachinable dimensions of human identity.
Her central premise: “The future is written between the system and the self.”
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Music
"A New Day (intro)" Performed by Skott
Licensed courtesy of Cosmos Music, Safari Riot
Licensed courtesy of Downtown Music UK Limited, Safari Riot Publishing, Sony Music Publishing


