Rage Bait, Parasocial, Vibe Coding and Now Slop

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17 Dec 2025
30

Slop Is the Word of the Year and That Says Everything
Merriam Webster officially named slop as the word of the year. Not slang. Not a meme. An actual dictionary decision. And it did not come out of nowhere.

Slop, in its modern meaning, refers to the massive amount of AI generated content produced not because it is useful or meaningful, but simply because it can be produced. Fast, cheap, endless. Content for the sake of content.
If you are not deeply online or not tuned into internet culture, you might miss what AI slop really is. It is not just bad writing. It is the feeling of scrolling endlessly and realizing nothing is sticking. The same ideas. The same formats. The same tone. Optimized but empty.
Merriam Webster itself acknowledged the divide.
“People found it annoying, and people ate it up,” the dictionary stated, pointing to the almost mocking tone behind the word. The message was clear. AI might be powerful, but when it comes to replacing human creativity, it often falls flat.
In a way, the word is less an insult and more a verdict.
Other dictionaries noticed the same cultural shift. Collins chose vibe coding, Cambridge highlighted parasocial, and Oxford selected rage bait. Different words, same anxiety. Technology shaping how we create, how we relate, and how we react.

Last year, Merriam Webster chose polarization, a word that captured a deeply divided society, especially in American politics. In 2023, the word was authentic, driven by conversations around AI, celebrity culture, identity, and social media. People were searching for what felt real.
Now, just one year later, we are calling the output slop.
That shift tells a story.
https://edition.cnn.com/2025/12/16/tech/slop-merriam-webster-2025-scli-intl

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