ROBBIE Williams has stirred up conversation by admitting he uses artificial intelligence to polish his writing, including Instagram posts.
The former Take That star, 52, confessed he drafts his own material first but then feeds it through AI software to fix his spelling and grammar.
He said bluntly, “I write the thing first, and then I throw the thing into AI. I’ve thrown so much stuff at it now. It knows.
Why This Matters
Williams' admission matters because it highlights how AI is reshaping creative authenticity—forcing fans and the industry to rethink authorship, transparency and artistic voice while also reflecting how performers increasingly rely on technology to manage perfectionism and public expectations.
“It knows me back to front. the things I’m writing on Instagram, I can’t spell, my grammar’s terrible. They sort that out.”
The revelation has sparked debate about authenticity in the music world as more artists turn to technology to support their creative output.
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An industry insider noted, to Radar Online “When an artist of Rob’s stature openly admits to using AI, it inevitably raises questions about where the line sits between personal voice and machine-assisted polish.”
Williams has also opened up about his ongoing struggles with anxiety and stage fright, describing his career as a “tightrope walk” where he constantly battles self-doubt.
He said, “This is a type rope walk act. we could fall. I could cause an international incident at any moment, I could end my career at any moment! And that is the anxiety that I am walking with and talking with at all times.”
Despite his global fame and record-breaking success, Williams remains candid about his insecurities and the tools he uses to manage them.
His admission arrives at a time when the music industry is navigating the tricky balance between innovation and maintaining genuine artistic expression.