There's a 19-year-old in LA who's worked with Prada, Calvin Klein, and Samsung. She charges ten thousand dollars per Instagram post. TIME named her one of the 25 most influential people on the internet.
She's also never taken a breath in her life.
Lil Miquela is code in designer clothes. And she's not alone anymore. Shudu, Imma, Aitana López, dozens of others. They don't sleep, they don't age, they never post something reckless at 2am and wake up to a PR crisis. For brands, that's not a gimmick. That's a solution.
The numbers back it up. AI influencers are pulling around 3% engagement while plenty of human creators with massive followings barely crack 2%. Half the cost, total control, content in any language, zero drama. On paper it's perfect.
So why does it feel off?
46% of consumers say they're uncomfortable with brands using AI influencers. Only 23% are actually fine with it. People sense something is broken even when the content looks great. It's not about the quality. It's about the deal underneath. When a real person recommends something, there's an unspoken agreement: I exist, I tried this, here's what I think. When an AI does it, that agreement disappears.
There's no experience. No opinion. Just output shaped to look like one.
But here's what should really make you pause. A nonprofit recently gave Lil Miquela a leukemia diagnosis. She documented her treatment on Instagram. Millions saw it. Five million organic impressions. The tagline was honest: 'She's not real, but the crisis is.' A fake person performed a real illness to generate real empathy. And it worked. Is that brilliant or deeply unsettling? That's not a rhetorical question. That's the line we're standing on right now.
Human influencers aren't just selling products anymore. They're selling proof of life. Bad lighting, unscripted moments, the take that wasn't in the brief. The stuff that only comes from actually being alive. That used to be a given. Now it's a competitive advantage.
When a perfectly engineered face can make you feel something, click something, buy something, and you never knew it wasn't real... does it even matter who's behind the screen anymore?