The biggest lie in 2025-2026 is that you need to pay for traffic to make sales. The real edge is owning 50 faceless accounts that keep printing money from content you posted months ago while everyone else is still buying ads.
"AI can't replace influencers."
I heard this exact sentence last week.
Then I read about Lexi.
She has a complicated backstory. A dropped college semester. Two cats she never quite posts about. She texts in lowercase. She remembers your dog's name. She sends voice notes after 11pm that end with a yawn.
She does not exist.
Behind the profile β one person. No camera. No studio. No team.
Just Claude. A laptop. And a .md file that knows her better than most people know themselves.
$43,000 last month. $200 to set up.
Nobody on her page suspects a thing.
I keep thinking about that guy who said "AI can't replace influencers."
She's already replaced eleven of them. And she's not even tired.
π¨Her name is Lila. She's 22, Swedish, with a small mole below her right jaw and a faint scar through her left eyebrow.
She has never existed.
UGC like hers goes for $75-250π° a clip.
Here's exactly how I built her π
@cryptansky Spotting the deepfake isnβt the point anymore. People are willingly paying for the simulation because itβs consistent, low-drama, and always available. The tech just made it cheap and scalable.
AI has removed the building barrier. Now the real game is quickly spotting painful, narrow problems in specific niches and packaging existing models into simple tools that perfectly fit their workflow.
A guy in China makes $1,000,000 a year while he sleeps. No employees. No code. Just AI building software for him every week.
They call it vibe coding. And it's quietly making solo developers obsolete.
Here's the exact model.
He opens Claude and types: "Build me a text-to-video app using Sora for real estate agents. Add subscriptions."
24 hours later he has a working product. Code written. Interface designed. Domain picked. Marketing copy done. Everything.
Then he does it again the next week.
He's not building 1 big company. He's building 50 tiny ones.
β Video editor built specifically for dentists
β Image generator built specifically for e-commerce stores
β Voice tool built specifically for podcasters
Each one charges $29 to $99 per month. Each one solves 1 specific problem for 1 specific type of business.
This is the insight most people miss.
Businesses don't want generic AI. A dentist won't open ChatGPT to make marketing videos. But they will pay $49 a month for a tool that does exactly that, wrapped in an interface made for their workflow.
He's not building technology. He's wrapping existing tools like Sora and Veo into something useful for a niche that would never touch the raw API themselves.
The full process looks like this:
β Spot a specific problem inside a specific industry β Tell Claude what to build
β Deploy it
β Market directly to that niche
β Collect subscriptions
β Repeat
Do this 10 times and you're making hundreds of thousands a year.
Do this 50 times and you're at $1,000,000.
His goal is to become what he calls an AI super individual. 1 person running 50 profitable software businesses simultaneously. No team. No office. No investors.
This is 2026. The barrier between having an idea and shipping a product is now 24 hours and a conversation with Claude.
You don't need to learn to code. You need to learn to spot problems and think like a builder.
The hard part was always building. AI just removed that part entirely.
I stumbled across this last night.
Couldn't scroll past it.
A girl built an AI version of herself. One click β AI copies any trend. She goes live her life.
AI posts.
AI trends.
AI earns.
Rent covered. Without showing up once.
The setup took one afternoon.
Free tools.
And now it just runs.
I keep asking myself why I'm still doing this manually.
You can't tell anymore.
Real person or 4 minutes of prompts?
The answer stopped mattering. The conversion rate didn't.
$50,000 influencer budget β $200 in AI tools.
That's the real story here.
The future of video marketing has arrived, and itβs powered by AI.
In this video, the secret to creating ultra-realistic AI videos for marketing success is revealed.
This technology is a game-changer for brands looking to enhance their advertising and performance marketing strategies.
Here are the key takeaways from the workflow:
Scalable UGC Content: Using platforms like Freepik Spaces, marketers can now generate highly realistic, user-generated content (UGC) at scale.
Character Consistency: One of the biggest challenges in AI has been solved-now you can create consistent characters, products, and scenes that look professional and authentic.
No Traditional Filming: This workflow allows businesses to produce high-end visual content without the need for traditional cameras or expensive shoots.
Advanced Tools: By combining Freepik Spaces with rendering engines like Nano Banana Pro and Sea Dance 2.0, you can achieve photorealistic results and perfect subject isolation in minutes.
Whether it's for TikTok, Instagram, or high-end ads, AI-generated videos are the ultimate tool to drive engagement in a competitive market.
This account has 151K followers.
Their most viewed video: 32,000,000 views.
It's an AI-generated caramel bed.
That's it.
No story.
No face.
No voice.
Just a satisfying visual that breaks your brain for 6 seconds.
Here's what nobody mentions:
Each video takes about 4 minutes to generate. One prompt. One tool. One upload.
32,000,000 people watched a caramel bed. 4 minutes of work.
I've been saying this for months.
The most viral content in 2026 isn't the most complex. It's the most satisfying.
Your brain doesn't ask questions. It just watches. And watches again.
151K followers.
4,700,000 likes.
500M+ views across platforms.
Built entirely on AI visuals that took less time to make than this post took to write.
-> Children's content on YouTube
-> is quietly making people rich and
-> almost no one is talking about it.
-> Not just adults content or OnlyFans
-> kid's content making from $1,000
-> to $5,000 dollars per million views.
-> The highest CPM on the platform
-> And kids watch the same video
-> on loop for every single days
-> she cracked the formula six months
-> and hasn't looked back.
-> Open YouTube, study what little kids
-> are obsessing over that week
-> Break down the colors the
-> characters and the pacing
-> Understand exactly why the
-> youngest ones can't look away
-> All that info goes into Claude
-> A full creative brief comes in secs
-> Character personalities, color palette
-> scene direction, movement style
-> Everything she needs to start building
-> Picsart handles the visual base
-> Leaves the aesthetic perfectly defined
-> Then, a single prompt in Sora 2
-> and the video renders itself
-> Fluid animation, Saturated colors
-> The exact kind of content that
-> makes a two-year-old grab
-> the tablet and refuse to let go
-> 10 minutes per video, start to finish
-> Last month, the channel
-> hit over 4 million views
-> YouTube paid her between
-> $4k and $12k dollars just for that
-> No camera, No microphone,
-> No editing timeline, No showing
-> her face on screen, Just research
-> Claude, Picsart, Sora 2,
-> and the upload button
-> The math is simple, the execution
-> is even simpler, Most people
-> scroll past kids' videos
-> without a second thought
-> She sees an income
-> stream in every single one
@Mho_23 AI content is clearly the skill to master in 2026. Your V3 with $0.02/sec + that level of realism looks like a game-changer! What do you guys think?
@0xbeinginvested Effective use of AI tools (Claude, Picsart, Sora) to create high-retention childrenβs content on YouTube with competitive CPM. Has anyone tested this method in practice?
This kid is 14.
He makes more than his dad.
Works less than his mom.
And his boss doesn't exist.
His "office" is his bedroom.
His "employee" is an AI girl on TikTok.
His "meetings" are checking how much she made while he slept.
Last month: $3,200. This month: more.
He's not worried about college. Not worried about the job market. Not worried about inflation.
Because he already figured out what most people spend their whole life looking for.
A system that works without him.
He's 14. You're not.
What's your excuse?
He made $10,000 from an AI model that doesn't exist
She moves like a real girl because a real person is moving underneath, him
> he records himself on the couch, turns his head, fixes his hair
> the system keeps his exact motion and builds a girl on top, new face, hair, body, age
> her face stays locked clip to clip, ElevenLabs gives her a voice
> TikTok pushes her into fashion tags because the motion reads as a real girl at home
Brands pay $600 to $1,200 a placement, a clip costs pennies
her first one hit 380,000 views in 13 hours, and three days earlier she was a bearded guy on the same couch
@onlinedopamine Generational scamming is crazy accurate π These AI 'old friends reunion' videos are the new Nigerian prince scam but with Hollywood production value. People still eat it up.
$13,119 in one month.
Look closer at the screen.
2 creators. Neither of them exist.
No camera. No studio. No real person waking up at 6am. Just two AI models running on a laptop. Posting. Engaging. Earning.
While the owner sleeps.
I've been saying this for months.
The most profitable creators in 2026 aren't people.
They're characters someone built on a Tuesday afternoon.
This is proof.
One image.
One prompt.
15 seconds of hyper-realistic ASMR β complete with soft whispers, natural breathing, subtle head tilts, and native audio.GPT image-to-video + Seedance 2.0 just proved we donβt need ElevenLabs anymore.
The model handled the full Japanese βγγγγγγγγβ comfort sequence perfectly. Wholesome, relaxing, zero post-editing.This isnβt hype.
This is the new baseline for personalized video content.
Earphones on.
Mind blown yet?
πWhatβs the first ASMR scenario YOU would generate? Drop it below.