TikTalk – Welcome To The Algorithm’s Accent

We used to create content to be understood.

Now, more often than not, we create for more clicks.
It starts small…

An article we optimize for Search Engines.A TikTok caption that uses phrases created by others that gets the culture clicking.A perfectly polite email drafted by ChatGPT.An article where the words feel oddly… AI-generated.

Suddenly, more and more people (and companies) are speaking this way… mistaking performance for personality.

No one told us to start speaking like this.
We just watched it “work.”
We saw the likes, the comments, the little check marks of approval.
And we learned… quickly.

Welcome to the algorithm’s accent.

TikTok has made the weirdest sentence structure in the room the most effective (check out this article: Algorithm On Fleek: How TikTok is Transforming the English Language).
ChatGPT is now changing vocabulary choices in written and spoken communications (check out this article: People Are Starting to Talk More Like ChatGPT). 
Memes aren’t just jokes anymore… they’re new grammar guides.
And what’s weirder is that ChatGPT is giving us the opposite impulse.

Where TikTok turns language up, ChatGPT turns it down.

Everything gets smoothed… flattened.
Polished to the point where it no longer sounds like a person… just a person who doesn’t want to offend (or sounds like everyone else).
One platform teaches us to speak creatively to fit a new culture.
The other blands us like HR manuals in a dress shirt.
And the net effect?

Our voices are slowly being replaced by performance.

We’ve been through this before.
The telephone changed how we greet each other.
Email rewired our sense of brevity.
Autocorrect made us all bad at spelling… but better at catching typos.

Still, this moment feels different.

Because for the first time, we’re not just using the tools.
We’re absorbing their personalities… it’s becoming a new kind of “voice”.
Think about how ChatGPT writes…
We all see the use of words we had not (typically) used before: “delve,” “comprehend,” “meticulous,” “swift,” “boast.”
We’re now using The Dash Test (if there’s an em dash, that means it’s AI generated).
Now scroll your inbox… now listen to yourself speak in a meeting.

The algorithm isn’t just watching us.

We’re watching it back… and copying.
And for marketers, leaders, creators?
That has serious implications.

Brands used to chase culture… now they chase cadence.

They want to either beat the algorithms or bend it to their will.
But here’s the problem (maybe opportunity):
Language isn’t just a wrapper for ideas anymore… it is the idea.
You change your tone, you change your message.
You change your rhythm, you change your meaning.
You change your language, you change who you are.
And if the goal is clarity without humanity?

Congratulations… the AI machines are winning (hello, AI slop).

But if you still want to sound like you?
Here’s what I think matters:

Write a little slower.Speak with more quirks.Don’t sand down your style to match the prompt.Don’t let the algorithm dictate the word choice or the flow.And maybe let the/some typos live? (this one makes me cringe).

Because the backlash is already here.

We see people thinking and creating in authentically human ways.
As a middle finger to the algorithm.
Even if it “costs them” visibility.
Some creators (but not enough) now seem to crave what the algorithm can’t optimize:
The glitch… the pause… the breath between thoughts that tells you someone’s “really” there.

TikTok and ChatGPT are teaching us to speak the same.

But real language?
It was always about being felt.
So ask yourself this:
If your words weren’t being scored by the machine…
Would you still say them the same way?

Or is the algorithm already ghostwriting our voice?

This is what Elias Makos and I discussed on CJAD 800 AM.

Mitch Joel · TikTalk – Welcome To The Algorithm’s Accent – The Elias Makos Show – CJAD 800

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Published on July 29, 2025 10:43
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Six Pixels of Separation

Mitch Joel
Insights on brands, consumers and technology. A focus on business books and non-fiction authors.
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