Channel 4 headquarters in London, Britain. EPA/ANDY RAIN

News

UK’s Channel 4 uses AI presenter to host show

Share

The UK’s Channel 4 TV station has aired the country’s first programme hosted entirely by an AI-generated presenter.

The episode, titled Will AI Take My Job? and part of the long-running Dispatches current affairs series, aired yesterday at 8pm and is available to stream on the Channel 4 platform.

The hour-long documentary explores how AI automation is transforming workplaces, pitting machines against humans in real-world tests across sectors such as medicine, law, fashion and music.

Viewers followed the unnamed female host, later revealed as AI creation Aisha Gaban, through on-location reports.

Her image, voice, and movements were entirely synthetic, created using AI prompts by Seraphinne Vallora, an AI marketing agency, for producer Kalel Productions.

At the end of the programme, it was revealed to the audience Gaban was not a human, for those who had not guessed it by then.

“In a British TV first, I’m actually an AI presenter. Some of you might have guessed. I wasn’t on location reporting this story. My image and voice were generated using AI,” she said.

The stunt highlights AI’s disruptive potential, noting that nearly three-quarters of UK bosses have already integrated the technology into roles previously held by humans.

It follows global precedents, such as China’s Xinhua news agency deploying an AI anchor in 2018 and South Korea’s SBS using one for five months in 2023.

Channel 4 emphasised compliance with its editorial guidelines on AI, including transparency, in its bid to provoke reflection on trust and authenticity in the digital era.

Louisa Compton, Head of News and Current Affairs at the broadcaster, said: “The use of an AI presenter is not something we will be making a habit of … Our focus is on premium, fact-checked, duly impartial and trusted journalism — something AI is not capable of doing.”

She added that the ploy underscores AI’s ease in deceiving audiences, amid industry concerns over job losses and ethical pitfalls, including backlash against AI-generated performers such as Tilly Norwood.

Adam Vandermark, Commissioning Editor for News and Current Affairs at Channel 4, praised the production’s realism but questioned AI’s role in investigative journalism: “It’s far too early to tell but it’s certainly a revelation to see this imaginary presenter front a Dispatches [programme] in such a clever and realistic way.”

Nick Parnes, CEO of Kalel Productions, said: “This is another risky yet compelling project for Kalel.

“It’s been nail-biting to create the AI presenter in time. Ironically, it gets even more economical to go with an AI Presenter over human, weekly. And as the generative AI tech keeps bettering itself, the presenter gets more and more convincing, daily.

“That’s good for our film but maybe not so good for people’s careers,” Parnes concluded.