From the outside (of SO) and as a 'insider' of the broader SE community - I feel like there's certain historical parallels here with the old NPR.
Stack Overflow would remain as laser sharp focused as possible, and NPR would host all those exciting and sometimes helpful (but not really answerable) questions.
However, as it usually happens, theory and practice are two entirely different beasts. NPR's promise proved extremely attractive to people who were more interested in posting joke answers, or just repeating earlier answers, or posting outright crap (Do you fart in the cubicle?). It didn't take long for everyone to realize that the site was not working, and most people just didn't bother with it.
As a mental exercise - just swap out 'NPR' for discussions, and consider how much of this is still true. I'm a (partial) believer in the broken window theory for the internet - that a clean, useful and welcoming site with quality content will attract quality content. A site filled with spam, and low quality content will attract garbage. We don't really want SO chan but I'd wonder what the vision for a successful discussions/board platform on SO looks like.
There's the additional quirk of this being essentially a new format... almost. The closest thing I can think of are oldschool image boards at this point. There's a certain lack of structure. Most of the guidance I can find is about mechanics, but building healthy culture is important too.
Automated/API access for smokey to clean up aside, its probably worth it for the people who designed this/are the owners of the project to take a good look at where things are wrong broadly, and why folks are not curating.
And a critical question here is what does this do that existing tools don't, and if there's an overlap, why would someone use discussions over other formats, and both a consideration of if its a right fit for the SE model, something that can stand on its own merits, or something that could be, on its own or in part a useful product.
I've certain biases here of course - that we've already have a neglected third space, but fundamentally - as something the company has built on its own initiative, in an attempt to try to branch off from the Q&A space yet again, It is up to the company to give it the best chance of survival. That could mean spending resources and staff to guide and curate the discussions platform to the point where the community feels its worth the effort and time to do it itself.