“They Are Losers” – ‘Hacks’ Hannah Einbinder Goes All Out Against AI in a Passionate Rant

Published 04/03/2026, 3:32 PM EDT

Hacks has always thrived on the uneasy chemistry between legacy and reinvention, sharp, biting, and uncomfortably close to the truth. It turned Hannah Einbinder into a defining voice of a generation that jokes about relevance while quietly panicking about obsolescence. Between Deborah Vance workshopping late-night monologues in cavernous Vegas rooms and Ava Daniels spiraling through punch-ups about cancel culture, bad tweets, and “relatable trauma,” the show captures a comedy industry that is both self-aware and self-destructive.

Speaking of a world where relevance is constantly under threat, Einbinder has now stepped off the scripted tension of Hacks to confront a far more destabilizing force: artificial intelligence and its growing imprint on creative labor.

Hannah Einbinder does not hold back on AI’s creative threat

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During a recent press conference in West Hollywood, Hannah Einbinder joined Jean Smart and series creators Paul W. Downs, Lucia Aniello, and Jen Statsky to discuss the upcoming final season. While the conversation touched on storytelling and legacy, it was Einbinder’s unsparing critique of AI that dominated attention. With a mix of comedic cadence and genuine frustration, she delivered a blistering statement.

“The people who make this stuff are losers. They’re not artists. They’re not creative… And they’ve wanted their whole lives to be special. And they’re not special. So, they’re trying to rob real creative people of our gifts….You are a loser. You will never be cool. And you probably had a rolly backpack in high school. I wanna put your head in the toilet and flush.”

Her comments arrive at a moment when AI’s foothold in Hollywood is no longer theoretical. Creators like Tilly Norwood, an emerging name tied to AI-generated performers and music visuals are securing projects even amid industry unease. At the same time, algorithmically generated “AI slop” from surreal fruit love stories to hyper-polished cat melodramas, have flooded social feeds, blurring the line between novelty and noise. 

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And yet, Hannah Einbinder’s Hacks appears ready to confront this very tension head-on.

How Hacks is writing AI into its final act

Season 5 of Hacks picks up with Deborah Vance firmly re-established as a cultural force, leveraging her renewed industry clout to shape the next phase of her career, this time on her own terms, while Ava Daniels finds herself no longer the insecure, canceled writer of Season 1 but a creatively confident voice navigating power, authorship, and control in a rapidly shifting landscape.

The final season is expected to center on the tension between legacy and ownership, particularly as new-age tools like AI-driven writing and performance begin encroaching on the very idea of originality.

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Premiering in 2021, Hacks quickly established itself as a razor-sharp exploration of generational conflict within comedy. Hannah Einbinder’s Ava Daniels, a struggling, often self-sabotaging writer, became the perfect counterpoint to Jean Smart’s seasoned Deborah Vance. Off-screen, Einbinder’s performance earned her an Emmy, a Critics’ Choice award, and multiple Golden Globe nominations, cementing her as both a comedic and dramatic force.

As Hacks prepares to take its final bow, Einbinder’s off-screen defiance is not just rant but a thesis statement of sorts. The stage may be scripted, but the stakes are not.

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Do you agree with the Hacks star? Does AI threaten creativity, or redefine it? Share your take in the comments. 

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Sarah Ansari

423 articles

Sarah Ansari is an entertainment writer at Netflix Junkie, transitioning from four years in marketing and automotive journalism to storytelling-driven pop culture coverage. With a background in English Literature and experience writing across NFL, NASCAR, and NBA verticals, she brings a research-led, narrative-focused lens to film and television. Passionate about exploring how stories are crafted and why they resonate, Sarah unwinds through sketching, swimming, motorsports—and yearly winter Harry Potter marathons.

Edited By: Aliza Siddiqui

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