hot girls have started using AI

Disney stars are ruining it

Bonjour,

I’ve been in Buenos Aires 24 hours and already had steak twice. Iron levels are:

We’re doing the most next week, so be sure to come thru.

  1. Catch us live streaming from Money Rails. Ticket still available here.

  1. It’s party time on November 18th with pod network and Polygon, with pals Privy and Blockaid, rsvp here. Outfit inspo 🔜 on Twitter.

ily,

Writer: Natasha 
Editor: Deana 

4,500 institutions. 58 markets. One onchain network, Polygon.

Consumer AI was cooking on high this week. The timeline had the good, the bad and the ugly on full display.

Let’s start with the good. Hot girl aesthetic has finally found its way to the AI factory.

Last week, fashion influencer Camille Montagnacai posted an outfit reel featuring a slick AI transition. Rather than the typical anti-AI rhetoric you usually see in these circles, the comments section was gagged.

Once people start using AI in ways that others actually like and see as creatively fresh, it seems they forget their issues and fears surrounding it. Suddenly, every fashion girlie with about 100k followers has discovered AI, and apparently the vibe is animal chic.

Instagram Post

Instagram Post

Next up, the bad. We all know live demos have had their fair share of nightmare moments, and for that reason I almost never want one. #neverforget

This week Russia should have listened to my anti-demo sentiment when they debuted their first humanoid robot with artificial intelligence. As it attempted to wave to the crowd, it fell and ate shit.

Post fall™, the robot, named AIDOL, wiggled on the ground as the team attempted to pick him up (he’s heavy!), while backstage staff fumbled the cover-up with a twisted sheet that made it obvious someone is getting executed fired.

He seemed ashamed. I felt bad.

And finally, the ugly. Disney star Calum Worthy’s startup, 2wai, went viral for duping Black Mirror Season 2, Episode 1.

The app allows users to create AI-generated avatars, and the promotional video highlights the ability to converse with deceased loved ones. The people are not happy.

Anyway, in happier news, the iconic short-form video platform that was ahead of its time, and gave us some of the best moments the internet has ever witnessed, is making a comeback.

Vine will come back as Divine, with a few key updates that I’m excited about:

  • Our main man Jack Dorsey is funding it.

  • It’s built on decentralized tech (unclear how, but we’re listening!).

  • It will not allow AI-generated content.

For those too young to remember: time to study up.