LinkedIn. Once a platform for professionals to network, share expertise, and engage in meaningful industry conversations. Now? It’s a digital wasteland of AI brain rot, where hollow engagement and trend-chasing masquerade as authenticity. Sure, it’s a corporate haven, but lately, LinkedIn has become a sickening reflection of everything wrong with our obsession with automation, mass production, and, let’s face it, the slow decay of genuine human interaction.
Let’s talk about the AI-fueled content chaos—this sea of empty, generic posts regurgitated by the tools claiming to “enhance” our online presence. These AI-driven missives flood our feeds like lifeless chatter, devoid of nuance, personality, or real insight. These meaningless trends and AI-automated engagement are the digital equivalent of SPAM—nothing of substance, all the calories. And people are devouring it, mindlessly scrolling, trapped in this perpetual cycle of synthetic engagement.
But this isn’t just about AI-generated content. It’s about the absurd trends also wreaking havoc on LinkedIn’s credibility. The Action Figurine and Ghibli trends are prime examples of how far LinkedIn has fallen from its professional roots. Let’s break them down.
The Action Figurine Trend: The Corporate Cosplay Farce
Somewhere along the way, LinkedIn decided it needed to be “fun” and “relatable.” Enter the action figurine trend—a ridiculous spectacle where professionals share photos of themselves with their little plastic avatars, trying to translate their power suits into toys somehow. It’s a bizarre attempt at authenticity, an awkward cross between corporate cosplay and professional branding, and it’s hard to take seriously. In a space meant for high-level industry discourse, we’re now debating which action figure best represents you as an individual brand. How does this elevate the professional conversation? The answer is that it doesn’t. It’s the perfect storm of AI brain rot and trend-chasing nonsense that only serves to dilute the very concept of what creative professionals want to see or discuss at this time.
The Ghibli Trend: A Corporate Branding Disrespect to Studio Ghibli’s Heart
Then there’s the recent wave of “Ghibli-inspired“ corporate branding trends. Ghibli, the legendary studio founded by Hayao Miyazaki, is now being co-opted for LinkedIn posts without respect for its core ethos. LinkedIn, the place where we’re supposed to build and elevate our careers, has become a breeding ground for using Ghibli’s deeply humanistic stories and art as shallow branding tactics. The juxtaposition is jarring.
Hayao Miyazaki has spent his career crafting narratives exploring the complexities of life, human emotion, and the importance of creativity and sustainability. His films reject the artificial and embrace the organic, the messy, and the real. As Miyazaki famously said, “I can’t watch this stuff and find [it] interesting. Whoever creates this stuff has no idea what pain is whatsoever. . . I strongly feel that this is an insult to life itself.”
Yet, here we are, watching companies slap Ghibli-esque imagery on everything from LinkedIn profile pictures to cannibalizations of internet memes. It’s a tragic irony—using the spirit of Miyazaki’s art as a cyclical trend to pump out content on the ever-looping feed for engagement purposes that disregard entirely the very values he champions. It’s no longer about nurturing creativity or fostering meaningful connections—it’s about exploiting nostalgia and aesthetics to sell a quick idea, all while the soul of the work gets steamrolled and vomited out until we find the next instant gratification trend.
AI Brain Rot: The Common Thread
What ties these absurd trends together is AI brain rot. They are products of a system that prizes algorithmic efficiency over authenticity and quantity over quality. AI is the engine behind the flood of hollow content, and these trends are nothing more than symptoms of a platform that has lost its way. LinkedIn was once a place where ideas could thrive—now, it’s a digital landfill of recycled, regurgitated content devoid of depth. The action figurine posts and Ghibli brand hijacking are just the tip of the iceberg.
So, here we are, consuming this ever-growing pile of corporate fluff, pretending we’re engaging in meaningful conversations while we’re really just staring at screens full of meaningless noise. It may be time to ask: What’s the actual cost of LinkedIn’s AI brain rot? Is our digital interaction, career growth, and creativity worth this commodification? Or are we all just playing along in the corporate cosplay of the moment, forever trapped in vacuum-sealed packages generated by machines, for machines, about machines?
LinkedIn, you’ve lost the plot.