Matt Britton on L.A.’s Spectrum News 1: Why Gen Alpha + AI Is the Biggest Shift in Parenting, Learning, and Humanity
In a new interview on Spectrum News 1 Los Angeles, bestselling author and Suzy CEO Matt Britton joined the conversation to break down how AI is fundamentally changing family dynamics, early education, and the mental development of Generation Alpha—the first generation to grow up with AI in the home.
In a new interview on Spectrum News 1 Los Angeles, bestselling author and Suzy CEO Matt Britton joined the conversation to break down how AI is fundamentally changing family dynamics, early education, and the mental development of Generation Alpha—the first generation to grow up with AI in the home.
“Gen Alpha will never know a world without AI. That changes how their brains will be wired—and how they’ll relate to the world around them,” Britton explained.
Parenting in the Age of AI: Opportunity + Risk
As AI tools like ChatGPT and Suno become as common in homes as tablets and TVs, parents are asking the right questions: How much AI is too much? What’s safe? What’s helpful?
Britton offered a balanced take:
“Parents can use AI creatively—to make songs, coloring books, or educational games. But there needs to be a clear boundary between helpful interaction and unchecked dependence.”
He encouraged families to use AI to unlock creativity and curiosity, not shortcut learning. At the same time, he warned of the real risks if parents hand over too much agency to chatbots and automation—especially without understanding the privacy concerns and psychological implications.
AI Relationships: When Technology Starts to Feel Human
Britton didn’t shy away from the darker edge of AI’s potential. As he noted on Spectrum News:
“For the first time, kids can interact with tech like they do with humans. That opens the door to real relationships with machines—sometimes even emotional ones.”
He cited a tragic real-world case of a young person who formed an unhealthy connection with an AI chatbot—leading to devastating consequences. The warning is clear: AI isn’t neutral. It’s persuasive. And parents need to stay involved, aware, and ahead of the curve.
Education Needs to Catch Up Fast
One of Britton’s strongest points: our education system is still built around a model that no longer matches reality.
“We still teach kids to memorize and regurgitate facts. But AI has devalued the knowledge economy. What matters now is creativity, problem solving, and critical thinking.
Britton argued that Gen Alpha’s future success won’t hinge on how well they memorize state capitals, but on how well they think, question, and innovate.
What Parents Should Do Now
Here are three immediate takeaways from Britton’s Spectrum News 1 interview:
Introduce AI early—but intentionally. Use it as a collaborative tool, not a replacement for attention, learning, or parenting.
Watch the relationship. If your child talks to AI more than they talk to friends or family, it’s time to reassess.
Push schools to evolve. The education system won’t change on its own. Parents and educators need to demand curriculum that prepares kids for an AI-powered world.
Matt Britton’s new book, Generation AI: How Gen Alpha + the Age of AI Will Change Everything, is now a national bestseller—and essential reading for any parent, educator, or innovator trying to keep up with this moment of massive cultural transformation.
Matt Britton Talks Generation AI on Phoenix CW7’s The Daily Mix Morning Show
This morning, Matt Britton—author of Generation AI and CEO of Suzy—joined The Daily Mix Morning Show on CW7 in Phoenix to unpack how artificial intelligence is reshaping parenting, education, and the future of childhood itself.
This morning, Matt Britton—author of Generation AI and CEO of Suzy—joined The Daily Mix Morning Show on CW7 in Phoenix to unpack how artificial intelligence is reshaping parenting, education, and the future of childhood itself.
“Generation Alpha,” Britton explained, “is the first group of humans growing up with AI in the household. That changes everything.”
From ChatGPT-powered homework help to AI-generated family songs, Britton walked viewers through the massive cultural shift already underway—and what it means for the next 15 years.
Teens + AI: Shortcut or Superpower?
Today’s kids are turning to AI tools like ChatGPT to finish assignments faster. But Britton challenged viewers to go deeper: “There’s a difference between using AI to cheat and using AI to learn.”
His take? Writing still matters. So does thinking. AI can enhance creativity—but only if kids are taught how to prompt it, interpret it, and build with it. That starts with reading, writing, and real-world context.
Education Is Stuck in the Past
Most schools are still built for the pre-AI era—memorization, testing, standardized outputs. But in a world where facts are instantly accessible, Britton argues we need to teach what AI can’t do: emotional intelligence, critical thinking, problem-solving.
“If you’re still teaching kids how to regurgitate facts, you’re preparing them for a world that no longer exists.” – Generation AI
Parenting in the Age of AI
Britton didn’t just speak as a technologist—he spoke as a parent. And he made it personal. From using AI to summarize Shakespeare to apps that make personalized coloring books from family photos, Britton showed how families can integrate AI into daily life without losing what matters most.
His message? Don’t fear the tools. Learn them. Play with them. Set boundaries around them. And most importantly, use them to deepen—not replace—human connection.
The Road Ahead: Exhilarating and Unsettling
Britton warned that AI isn’t just a tool—it’s a force that’s already reshaping our children’s cognition, relationships, and worldview. For Generation Alpha, talking to AI will be as normal as texting a friend.
Will that lead to more creativity, independence, and innovation? Or more dependence, distraction, and cognitive decline?
The answer depends on what we do now.
Order the Book That Unpacks It All
Matt Britton’s Generation AI is your guide to understanding and navigating the most transformational shift of our time. Whether you’re a parent, educator, technologist, or brand leader—this book will change how you see the future.