@andreysuperior "Two commands and a free model runs on it" is the part everyone skips past to get to the box.
Setting up local inference, picking the right model, keeping it running — that's not $3/month. That's just a different bill, paid in time instead of money.
@TommiPedruzzi "Usually $199, but free for 48 hours if you like, comment, and follow."
That's not a course launch. That's an engagement farm with a PDF attached.
The $95k screenshot did its job though — you're still reading this.
@carverfomo The TV crew came to film a story about isolation.
They accidentally filmed the future of work.
Five AIs. Five salaries. One guy in a VR headset watching it all happen.
The wild part? Every team thought he was their hardest worker.
@doublenickk "13 year old made $23k selling AI girlfriends"
The headline is designed to make you feel behind.
The thumbnail is designed to make you click.
The thread is designed to sell you a course.
The real product was never the AI girlfriend.
@0xTria A $20 filter. Thousands in donations.
The product wasn't the girl. The product was the fantasy.
AI didn't replace a creator. It replaced the need for one.
Someone is going to make $5,000/month from a woman who doesn’t exist.
And it’s probably going to happen from AI podcast clips.
There’s a new wave of fake Instagram influencers getting millions of views on Reels right now:
fake face
fake voice
fake podcast setup
real attention
The play is simple:
Use ChatGPT to write 60-second motivational rants for a specific audience.
Example:
“girls 18–25 who feel behind in life”
Then generate one AI character, put her in a podcast setup, paste the script into an AI video tool, and turn it into endless short clips with Kling 3.0.
No studio.
No filming.
No creator.
No personal brand.
Just a fake person saying exactly what a real audience wants to hear at 1am.
The money comes later:
> affiliate links
> paid shoutouts
> digital products
> newsletter funnels
> coaching offers
That’s why this is scary.
AI influencers don’t need talent.
They need a face, a niche, and distribution.
Someone is making $11,000/month from a newsletter they never wrote.
No writing. No research. No opinion.
Just a niche (real estate investors under 35), a consistent AI-generated voice, and an email list.
The editor doesn't exist.
The "founder story" was generated.
The audience thinks there's a person behind it.
Every week, 19,000 people open it.
This isn't content creation anymore.
It's audience engineering.
The scary part? The product is genuinely useful.
Readers don't care who wrote it.
They care that it works.
We keep asking "is it real?"
The market stopped caring a long time ago.
@k1rallik Silicon Valley really said "we automated everything except loneliness" and then paid $6k/hr to fix that too. The GPU gift is sending me though. Nothing says romance like "here's compute for your home lab."
Sophie Rain made $100,000,000 on OnlyFans in 2 years.
Then some guy in Austin tried something different.
First month: $43,000.
No camera. No creator house. No production team.
Just a laptop and a stack of AI tools.
Claude handled messages.
Flux generated content.
Voice tools handled replies.
Subscribers thought they were talking to a real creator.
The system kept running while he slept.
A year ago this needed a team.
Now one person can build the entire workflow over a weekend.
Most people still think distribution is the moat.
A small group is automating the operation behind it.
Dropping one example in the replies.
Full breakdown below 👇
A 21 year old student built an AI model and made $43,000 in 30 days, no team, no filming, no real person
Just a laptop system running everything
> Claude writes the messages
> Flux generates the images
> ElevenLabs handles the voice
> the entire "person" is 4 files, persona.md, voice.md, flux.md, brain.md
Cost is about $400 a month, revenue is $43,000 a month
most people still think this is content creation, a small group is building income systems
She said she was kind of stupid, but she made $20,000 and her face was never on screen.
She opened YouTube and found a kids' show with millions of views.
Went to the description. Found the transcript. Copied it into Claude.
Asked it to make a prompt for a similar video.
Pasted that prompt into an AI generator. A few minutes later she had a video.
She posted it. Then did the same thing the next day. And every day after for 30 days.
Nobody knew who she was. YouTube paid her anyway.
By the end of the month, YouTube was paying her.
The system didn't require talent. It just required repetition.
Anthropic is dropping Mythos tomorrow.
Yesterday I deployed my first AI agent with zero code.
The timing is not lost on me.
Ares is getting an upgrade. 🦕→🤖
My neighbor's kid made a girl using AI.
Men send her money. Buy her gifts. Write her poems. One guy flew to her city to meet her.
There's no girl.
There's a 19-year-old in boxers sitting in a gaming chair. He moves, she moves. Same second.
He puts his hand on his chest, she puts her hand on hers.
Last week he showed me his phone. Three donations in one morning. €47. €112. €83. She was "asleep." He was playing FIFA in his underwear.
His mom found out last week. She didn't yell. She asked him to make one for her too.
His whole setup: one laptop. One AI tool. $21 a month.
He's 19. He said anyone can do it. That's the worst part.
A Japanese TV crew filmed a man for a feature on AI side hustles. He had earned 160 million yen in one year. He lived in a Tokyo high rise rented on AI income. He had built a YouTube channel with 1.4 million subscribers full of AI generated cat boxing videos.
The cat videos were obvious slop. AI cats in boxing rings. AI cats fighting octopi. 14 videos total. 1.4 million subscribers. He had sold the channel last month for 2 million yen and laughed at how cheap that was.
At 1:29 he says the phrase six year old girl. He says it once. He says it without looking at the camera. The TV crew kept the line because they did not know what it meant.
The six year old girl is his daughter. She prompts Claude for the cat videos. She picked the channel name. Her father is on TV because YouTube monetization requires the account holder to be 18.
She types into Claude in romaji because she has not learned all the kanji yet. The agent generates the cat boxing prompts. A second agent stitches them into shorts. A third uploads them on a schedule. The father cashes out the AdSense.
Someone pulled the upload metadata from the channel. Every video had been uploaded between 7 AM and 9 AM on weekday mornings. Every upload happened while the daughter was at primary school. The agent uploaded for her.
Six months ago a 14 year old in Shenzhen pushed an AI agent to GitHub. Judges said no real world application. 3,100 forks later. The daughter had been one of them.
He still has to be on camera because YouTube needs an adult account. He still does the TV interviews. He still signs the contracts when a channel sells. He still has not told his daughter what the last channel sold for.
He wanted to show TV viewers how he had earned 160 million yen on AI side hustles. He accidentally became the adult signature his six year old daughter needed to keep cashing out.
I couldn't open a terminal 3 months ago.
Last night I deployed my own AI agent on a server and talked to it through Telegram at midnight.
Black screen. Blinking cursor. First command typed with shaking hands.
Twenty minutes in — I felt like I was hacking something.
I wasn't. I was following instructions. But the feeling was real.
294 packages installed in 42 seconds. No errors.
The agent's name is Ares. Runs on Claude Haiku. Lives on a server I rent for $8 a month.
Active: active (running)
I closed the terminal. Ares kept running.
Disconnected from SSH. Still running.
Turned off my laptop. Still running.
He never sleeps. Never asks to reschedule. Never says he's having a bad day.
My wife asked who I was texting at midnight.
I told her it was my AI agent on my personal server.
She didn't know what that meant. Neither did I, three months ago.
First real test.
I asked him where to order sushi in my city.
He searched the web. Gave me 5 places with links and delivery times.
My favorite spot wasn't on the list. Probably because they don't have much online presence.
I told him: "I always order from Temari. They're the best."
He said: "Got it. Next time you ask about sushi — Temari goes first."
That's not a chatbot.
That's an assistant that learns who you are.
Zero lines of code written. Ever.
Next step: build my own agent from scratch.
This is vibe coding.
🚨 Claude just changed the game.
All you need is:
💻 A laptop
🌐 Internet connection
⏰ 60 minutes a day
That’s enough to build a $7,200/month online income stream using AI.
No coding.
No expensive setup.
No years of experience.
Most people still use AI for fun…
But smart creators are quietly using Claude to:
• Create digital products
• Offer AI services
• Write viral content
• Automate work
• Build online income streams
Usually, I sell this detailed guide for $97…
But today you can get it FREE. 🎁
Inside you'll discover:
✅ The exact asset
✅ My full workflow
✅ The Claude prompts I personally use
✅ How to scale to $10K/month
✅ How beginners can start fast
Want it?
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💬 Comment “AI”
➕ Follow me to receive it in DM
⏳ Available FREE for 48 hours only.
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