By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept
ProbizbeaconProbizbeacon
  • Business
  • Investing
  • Money Management
  • Entrepreneur
  • Side Hustles
  • Banking
  • Mining
  • Retirement
Reading: And The Truth? This Writing Style Screams AI
Share
Notification
ProbizbeaconProbizbeacon
Search
  • Business
  • Investing
  • Money Management
  • Entrepreneur
  • Side Hustles
  • Banking
  • Mining
  • Retirement
© 2025 All Rights reserved | Powered by Probizbeacon
Probizbeacon > Money Management > And The Truth? This Writing Style Screams AI
Money Management

And The Truth? This Writing Style Screams AI

September 24, 2025 13 Min Read
Share
13 Min Read
And The Truth? This Writing Style Screams AI
SHARE

Six months ago, you could spot AI-generated text by its polished grammar, rigid essay structure, suspicious fondness for em dashes – and, of course, the inevitable emoji bullets (🔥🚀✨). The real giveaway, at least to my eye and ear, isn’t the emojis or the punctuation. It’s the cadence.

AI writing has a rhythm problem. The sentences are clipped. Overly dramatic. Split into one-line paragraphs that feel more like infomercials than journalism.

“The truth? This wasn’t SEO causation. It was a stock market correction.”
“They were left behind. They were angry. They weren’t your people.”

On the page, this is nails-on-chalkboard grating. It doesn’t read as conversational. It reads as performative. In my opinion, this is, without a doubt, AI’s most recognizable stylistic fingerprint.

A Brief History Of The AI Cadence

This rhythm predates AI. It has been the language of speechwriters, preachers, and copywriters long before GPT entered the chat. Think Reagan’s addresses, Clinton’s campaign rallies, Obama’s campaign speeches, Churchill’s wartime broadcasts, and Blair’s conference speeches. Each leaned on rhythm and repetition to generate a great deal of emotion out of a speck of substance. Pair that with Captain Kirk’s famously staccato delivery, televangelists’ sermons, or TED Talks built around dramatic pauses, and you see how cadence can make small or mundane ideas feel powerful and deep.

That style used to stay in its lane. Where print valued density and clarity, speech valued brevity and rhythm. Readers could re-read; listeners could not. Editors enforced writing standards and styles and the economics of print rewarded information density over theatrics. As a result, this cadence lived solely in spoken word. It lived in speeches and sales copy, and not in essays and articles.

AI collapsed those boundaries. Because LLMs cannot (or chose to not) differentiate between a stump speech, a YouTube transcript, and a white paper, they overindex patterns designed to persuade aloud and repurpose them for the written page. Now, we are inundated with technical articles that read like motivational talks.

Why AIs Default To This Cadence

The AI cadence is not an accident – it’s a reflection of what models were most heavily trained on. Large language models have been fed a disproportionate amount of spoken-word material: transcripts of speeches, news reports, debates, interviews, webinars, podcasts, and video scripts. These aren’t “written texts” in the traditional sense; they are spoken performances converted into text.

Why so much spoken-word data? Because it’s cheap and plentiful. Back when I was running my ISP, I loved radio and TV for advertising and news mentions because it was far less expensive than buying or winning space in print. Broadcasters had 24 hours a day to fill, and local stations were always desperate for content. Print, on the other hand, is expensive. Every page of a newspaper, magazine, or book costs money to produce, and publishers limit content to what is necessary or affordable. As a result, far more hours of audio and video have been produced than carefully edited prose — and much of that material ends up transcribed. Those transcripts give the models a vast mountain of “written-down speech” compared to a relatively smaller body of curated, edited text.

See also  6 Key Findings From Marketing Leaders

The difference is subtle but important: a transcript is in a written medium, but it is not writing in a written style. It preserves the cadence of spoken delivery — short bursts, rhetorical pauses, fragments. Models overindex this rhythm because it dominates the dataset.

Even when prompted to avoid it, the models can’t resist drifting back into this rhythm. They might manage a few sentences of varied prose, but the gravitational pull of the AI cadence always drags them back. It’s now the default groove burned into their training.

The Em Dash Problem

That overindexing also explains a related AI tell: the sudden overuse of em dashes. In polished writing, dashes were historically used sparingly for emphasis or interruption. In speech, however, pauses are constant. Transcripts often mark those pauses with dashes. For a model swimming in transcripts, the dash becomes a default punctuation mark, because it functions as the written equivalent of a spoken pause. The result is copy littered with dashes – not because the ideas require them, but because the training data normalized them.

Punctuation As Breath

Punctuation has always been about more than grammar. Periods, commas, and dashes are signals for how we pause and where we breathe. They are like rests in music, telling the reader when to stop, inhale, and reset before continuing. Well-edited prose balances those pauses so the rhythm feels natural.

The AI cadence breaks this balance. When every thought is chopped into fragments, you’re effectively told to breathe after every line. Reading an article like this feels like hyperventilating: shallow breaths, constant interruptions, no sustained flow. It makes everything sound catastrophic, urgent, or world-shattering, even when the subject matter is mundane. Gentle readers, not every sentence or every idea warrants that level of drama.

Where this leaves us is that when models generate text, they parrot back the structures they’ve seen most often: speech rhythms and speech punctuation, presented as though they were the standard for written communication. They are not. They’re salesmanship with line breaks and pauses dressed up as prose.

See also  AI Search Sends Users to 404 Pages Nearly 3X More Than Google

Why Readers React To It

This cadence feels powerful at first. It mimics natural speech. It creates rhythm. It feels dramatic without requiring depth. That’s why it pops in feeds.

However, the longer it is stretched out, like in long-form content, or the more a reader is exposed to the same cadence over and over and over again, the power you once felt collapses into disdain. This breathy, short-sentence delivery leads to:

  • Oversimplification which flattens nuance.
  • Repetition that manipulates more than it informs.
  • Every line to demand attention ensuring none of them earn it.
  • Readers to suspect style is substituting for substance.

Here is the deeper problem: when everything is delivered as if it were earth-shattering, readers begin to doubt the authenticity of the message itself. It’s Syndrome’s hypothesis in The Incredibles: “When everyone is super, no one is.” If every sentence screams urgency, then nothing actually carries weight.

Historically, this kind of relentless, crisis-driven cadence has also been a manipulation tactic. Political demagogues, televangelists, and snake-oil salesmen leaned on hyperbole precisely because they lacked evidence. When AI reproduces that same rhythm on the page, it inherits the credibility problem too. Readers may not articulate it consciously, but they feel it: if you have to shout every line, maybe you don’t have enough substance to stand on quietly.

Just as keyword stuffing once became a hallmark of low-quality SEO, this cadence is already becoming the hallmark of low-quality AI. Readers recognize the rhythm before they absorb the message. When the medium distracts from the message, trust erodes.

A Tale Of Two Paragraphs

AI cadence in practice:

“The algorithm changed.
Sites lost traffic.
Panic spread.
And the industry?
It declared SEO dead – again.”

Now, the same idea written for readers:

“When the algorithm changed, many sites saw a drop in traffic. The panic was predictable. Within days, familiar headlines declared SEO dead once again. The cycle repeats every few years, and every few years it proves wrong.”

The difference here is obvious: one is an infomercial and the other is writing.

How To Spot It

Editors and readers can train themselves to notice:

  • Long runs of one-sentence paragraphs.
  • Rhetorical questions with no depth (often beginning with conjunctions like And or But…
  • Sentence fragments pretending to be profound.
  • Sermon-like pacing that seems to expect a chorus of ‘amens’ (or applause, if you’re lucky)…

Simply put, once you have seen it, you cannot unsee it: it is the literary equivalent of a laugh track.

See also  YouTube Monetization Updates Across Long-Form, Shorts, & Live

How To Write Like A Human Again

How do we remedy this situation? Short of, I suppose, doing our own writing?

  • Vary sentence length instead of defaulting to extremes.
  • Use rhetorical questions sparingly – only when they genuinely add depth.
  • Group related ideas into paragraphs; readers can handle more than one sentence at a time. Unless you are writing FOR toddlers, do not treat your readers as though they ARE toddlers.
  • Prioritize clarity and voice over performative drama. Note here that the goal isn’t to sound casual at all costs, but to sound intentional, rational, and backed by data.

Why It Matters For SEOs And Marketers

AI writing tools are embedded in nearly every workflow. Left unchecked, they will flood the web with copy that reads like an endless sales pitch. Professionals must edit not just for facts but for voice.

That means:

  • Training teams to recognize and break the AI cadence.
  • Creating style guides that emphasize varied sentence and paragraph structure.
  • Editing AI drafts with rhythm in mind, not just keywords.
  • Writing for humans who read – not just platforms that skim.

Respecting the reader’s time and intelligence is, in the end, the real optimization.

Is There Ever A Place For This Style?

Yes, of course, but like most things, in moderation. Staccato writing is effective for:

  • Ad copy where space is limited.
  • Video scripts where pacing drives attention. (Your LinkedIn vertical videos and IG Reels? Have at it. This is where the staccato AI cadence shines.)
  • The occasional LinkedIn post engineered for scanning.

However, should this become the default writing style for articles, blogs, or essays? Abso-effing-lutely not. It cheapens the content and undermines credibility.

In Closing

AI has introduced more than just new tools. It has also normalized certain stylistic tics that don’t belong in most forms of writing. Among these, the AI cadence problem is the most recognizable and the most damaging when left unchecked.

Writers, editors, and marketers need to treat the presence of AI cadence in their writings the same way we treated keyword stuffing a decade ago: as a major red flag. The difference between human and AI writing isn’t just factual accuracy. It’s rhythm, intent, and voice.

The real divide isn’t human versus machine. It’s generic versus intentional. Intentional writing that is structured for clarity, rooted in substance, and respectful of the reader will always stand out.

More Resources:


Featured Image: N Universe/Shutterstock

You Might Also Like

Majority Of Social Media Users Admit They’d Be Happier If It Didn’t Exist

YouTube Answers Creator Questions On Profanity Monetization

The Best Personal Loans for Funding Your Next Big Step

9 Real Ways To Get Free Samples (Yes, These Actually Work!)

How to Earn Free Amazon Gift Cards: 11 Real Ways to Try!

TAGGED:Content CreationMarketingSEO
Share This Article
Facebook Twitter Copy Link
Previous Article Pew: Most Americans Want AI Labels, Few Trust Detection Most Americans Want AI Labels, Few Trust Detection
Next Article Are AI Search Summaries Making Evergreen Articles Obsolete? Are AI Search Summaries Making Evergreen Articles Obsolete?
Leave a comment Leave a comment

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Stay Connected

235.3kFollowersLike
69.1kFollowersFollow
11.6kFollowersPin
56.4kFollowersFollow
136kSubscribersSubscribe
4.4kFollowersFollow
- Advertisement -
Ad imageAd image

Latest News

Perplexity Launches Comet Browser For Free Worldwide
Perplexity Launches Comet Browser For Free Worldwide
Money Management October 3, 2025
Moving Beyond E-E-A-T: Branding, Survival And The State Of SEO
Branding, Survival And The State Of SEO
Money Management October 2, 2025
Where to Spend, What to Skip: Marketing Moves That Generate Higher ROI
Where to Spend, What to Skip: Marketing Moves That Generate Higher ROI
Money Management October 2, 2025
Why I Recommend My Clients To Expand From SEO To YouTube
How AI Really Weighs Your Links (Analysis Of 35,000 Datapoints)
Money Management October 2, 2025
//

We influence 20 million users and is the number one business and technology news network on the planet

probizbeacon probizbeacon
probizbeacon probizbeacon

We are dedicated to providing accurate, timely, and in-depth coverage of financial trends, empowering professionals, entrepreneurs, and investors to make informed decisions..

Editor's Picks

Comparison For Google Ads Creatives
A Bitcoin Mining Powerhouse Emerges
15 Proven Tips to Get More Social Media Followers
AI Alone Won’t Save You — Humans Still Run the Show

Follow Us on Socials

We use social media to react to breaking news, update supporters and share information

Facebook Twitter Telegram
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Disclaimer
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Service
Reading: And The Truth? This Writing Style Screams AI
Share
© 2025 All Rights reserved | Powered by Probizbeacon
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Lost your password?