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Who’s Really Behind Her Screen? You’re Not Ready For The AI-Generated Influencers Making Six-Figures. Be careful who you DM!

  • Writer: Voices Heard
    Voices Heard
  • Apr 16
  • 2 min read

Updated: Apr 17


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In a plot twist that would make Black Mirror blush, the hottest new influencers on the internet aren’t even alive. They don’t eat, sleep, or get canceled—and they definitely don’t take bathroom breaks. Meet the AI-generated “it girls” of the digital era, pixel-perfect avatars raking in real-world cash and commanding fanbases bigger than your favorite D-list celebrity.

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Leading the artificial pack is Aitana López, a pink-haired AI model from Spain with over 250,000 Instagram followers. She earns up to $11,000 a month modeling lingerie, promoting brands, and—brace yourself—directing people to paid platforms like Fanvue. Created by a frustrated modeling agency tired of flaky human influencers, Aitana never misses a deadline or asks for oat milk in her coffee.


But wait, it gets weirder: there’s now a full-blown beauty pageant for AI models called “Miss AI.” Yes, the contestants are entirely digital, and no, none of them are worried about their lighting. Some folks are losing it over how these virtual vixens could warp beauty standards, while others are just impressed.


So what do we make of it? Influencers that don’t age, argue, or demand raises might be the dream for marketers—but it’s a bit crazy. Not to mention 100 more words we can describe it as.



Your favorite “it girl” might just be a .jpeg with perfect cheekbones and no soul. Someone tell Nick!!!! 🙏

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So, there’s this whole growing trend where AI-generated women are popping up on sites like OnlyFans and Fanvue, posting fake nudes and chatting with people — and dudes are paying for it, sometimes not even realizing they’re talking to a bot. It started out looking like these were just “AI influencers” on Instagram, maybe getting brand deals or being artsy, but turns out a lot of them are just funneling followers to paid adult content platforms.


And it gets wild — some of the images aren’t even purely AI; they’re deepfakes or have stolen faces slapped onto fake bodies.


Sites like Fanvue and OnlyFans technically ban stolen identities or deceptive AI, but enforcement is spotty. Real human creators are worried, too — AI might save them time with chatbots, but fans might lose trust if they think everything’s fake. The creepiest part? Some customers clearly don’t know it’s all artificial — they’re crushing on computer code. Welcome to the uncanny valley of internet thirst.

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