I worked in journalism for many years. I see no prospect that AI can rush out to the scene of a fire and interview survivors. To do that, it would have at least to be fitted with a suitable robotic body that can do everything human bodies can do, and we are far from that, and it may be impossible. In addition, since AI is not self aware so far as we know, it would never be able to ask survivors appropriate empathetic and meaningful questions. And while AI may be getting more competent, it still fucks a lot of stuff up (though of course humans do too).
Are we going to have AI bartenders, lumberjacks, line cooks, chefs, circus performers? If AI is a threat to jobs they would seem mainly to be white-collar jobs that involve a lot of data crunching.
Over my lifetime we have gone from white collar workers being suspected by the blue collar workforce of not doing actual work, through white collar workers being convinced that they do most of the real work, to white collar workers believing that
everyone is a white collar worker.
None of these have ever been true.
Automation took away a lot of blue collar jobs, and now it is possible for a cubicle dweller to never encounter anyone who doesn't work at a desk, with a computer. Well, it isn't, but the folk they do encounter in that category are mostly invisible - janitors, bartenders, bus drivers and the like. Servants.
To such a cubicle dweller, it's pretty easy to imagine AI taking over "all the jobs", by which they mean "all the real jobs", by which they mean "all the jobs that entail staring at a computer all day".
Of course, it won't. AI isn't up to the task. But even if it could and did, there would still be a need for someone to go and stick a microphone in the face of a traumatised homeowner who just lost everything, for the entertainment of a TV audience who might have forgotten, since last week, what the survivor of a house fire looks like.