In this week’s episode of Blavity Town Hall, host Raven Schwam-Curtis examines how artificial intelligence is reshaping work, infrastructure and culture, and who may bear the greatest costs as the technology expands.
What began as experimental AI tools has quickly evolved into systems used across workplaces, government operations and everyday digital services. As adoption accelerates, the episode focuses on two key questions: which workers are being disrupted first and whether Black communities are disproportionately affected by the growth of AI.
One of the earliest impacts is already showing up in the labor market. While AI is often promoted as a driver of innovation, many of the roles most vulnerable to automation are not the highest paid. Administrative work, bookkeeping, accounting support, customer service and data-processing jobs are increasingly exposed to automation. Frontline and service roles — including call center support, scheduling and cashier work, are also being reshaped as companies adopt automated systems.
That shift raises concerns about how the benefits and risks of AI will be distributed across the workforce.
Black workers face uneven risks from automation
The episode explores how occupational segregation and long-standing labor inequities shape who is most vulnerable to displacement. Black workers are overrepresented in several sectors that researchers expect to be heavily affected by automation, meaning AI-driven changes could deepen existing economic disparities if access to retraining and new opportunities remains uneven.
Some estimates suggest artificial intelligence could disrupt a significant portion of jobs across industries in the coming years. Studies have also warned that the racial wealth gap could widen if the industries creating new AI-driven roles remain less accessible to Black workers.
At the same time, the conversation highlights that the outcome is not predetermined. AI could also create new forms of work and improve public systems if communities historically excluded from the tech industry are included in decisions about how the technology is developed and deployed.
AI is also reproducing old biases in new forms
Beyond the workplace, the episode examines how AI is already reflecting existing racial biases online.
One growing concern is the rise of so-called “AI blackface” — synthetic images and videos that mimic Black people or reinforce racist stereotypes. These outputs can range from caricatured depictions that echo historical tropes to fully AI-generated social media accounts that present themselves as Black individuals while spreading misinformation or inflammatory content.
In some cases, AI-generated videos portraying Black people have circulated widely online, including fabricated scenes of confrontations with law enforcement or exaggerated stereotypes tied to longstanding racial narratives. Because the visuals appear realistic, they can be difficult for viewers to immediately identify as artificial.
The episode frames these developments as part of a broader challenge in AI development: technology is often described as neutral, but systems trained on biased data can reproduce the same inequities present in the societies that created them.
Blavity Town Hall also looks at the environmental side of the AI boom, including the rapid expansion of data centers and their potential impact on nearby communities.
Later in the episode, Raven speaks with technology strategist Ashley Gatewood about the opportunities AI could create, the risks it poses for workers and why representation in the tech industry remains critical as these systems evolve.
New episodes of Blavity Town Hall air biweekly.
The post AI Blackface: Let’s Talk About It, As Well As Black Workers Being Impacted By AI Boom appeared first on Blavity.