Alexis Krasilovsky
Look Who’s Dreaming Now
One more nightmare:
We lose the Writers’ Strike.
AI replaces us,
stripping a generation
of what we could have said.
Writers go homeless.
Wasted, our bodies roll
down the dusty banks of the river
to drown.
I awake in time to picket,
walking the plank.
Some of us survive
collecting plastic bottles.
We stuff them like fortune cookies
hoping our loglines
will float and be discovered.
The Pacific is so polluted
that our stories don’t wash up
on foreign shores.
My monitor stares back at me
like a murky tank.
It shatters in an earthquake.
Its fish surf to and fro
over the drenched lobby
of a dream factory
whose CEO is taking a vacation.
He rocks in a hammock somewhere
while AI dreams the dreams
that should be ours.
On Letting Nature Lie
I’m a lizard paparazzi.
You’ll probably think I’m rude,
exploiting little lizards—
and really should be sued.
But when I took my iPhone out
to document their crawl,
the lizards tried to tell me
it didn’t bother them at all.