One of the things that A.I. can do well at this point in history is mimic Hayao Miyazaki's character designs that you can see in his Studio Ghibli films.
Here's Gizmodo:
"The trend of using Open AI’s ChatGPT to create AI images in the distinctive style of Studio Ghibli probably should have ceased the moment the official White House X account hopped aboard. But there’s a new wrinkle in the story today, as one of the trend’s proponents posted a cease and desist notice they claimed to have received from Studio Ghibli representatives—which fellow social media users immediately called out as being as fake as the 'art' that inspired it.
"Along with the (fake) letter, X user teej used the platform to defend what they’d done, writing in part: 'AI creators deserve protection, not punishment. Expression is sacred. Imagination is not illegal. If I have to be a martyr to prove that, so be it.'
"It’s hard not to chuckle at this response to, let’s see, typing a prompt into a program so that it can create an AI image blatantly ripping off hours of hard work and creativity from actual human artists, including the great Hayao Miyazaki and his Ghibli team."
Some people think creativity is just a magic key and all they have to do is find that key and it'll all be easy. I mean, take a look at Ann Telnaes' response that AI is theft; that creating art is more than keywords and prompts.
I don't believe a nonhuman intelligence could craft stories and visuals like Miyazaki -- or Disney or Eisner or Kurtzman or Steranko or Tardi or Herge or Jansson or Schulz or any of the greats. Here's a lovely collection of visuals from Miyazaki's 1992 film Porco Rosso. All human-generated. Same with the story. Well worth a watch or rewatch.