Sexy internet celebrity MAGA supports Trump! Turns out her real identity is an AI created by an Indian man, estimated to earn thousands of dollars a month

Indian medical students use AI to create sexy MAGA influencers, targeting conservative men in the United States, combining political and erotic content to harvest traffic—earning thousands of dollars a month. Experts are concerned that this kind of virtual influencer could become flooded and may end up as a tool for information warfare, sparking a crisis.

Sexy influencer MAGA supporting Trump—powered by AI

Sexy influencer Emily Hart (Emily Hart) often shares beautiful lifestyle photos on social media. She is a loyal MAGA fan of Trump who opposes abortion, opposes “woke culture,” and opposes immigration—but her true identity turns out to be an AI made by a man.

Using the pseudonym Sam, a 22-year-old Indian medical student recently told the media outlet Wired that to raise money for the costs of medical licensing exams and future immigration to the United States, he used AI tools to create Emily Hart, spending only 30 to 50 minutes per day managing the social media account can give each short video 3 million to 10 million views.

Within just one month, Emily Hart’s account on Instagram accumulated more than 10,000 followers. Fans even pay for subscriptions to her adult content on the competing platform Fanvue, or buy clothing with political slogans.

Sam estimates that this model can help him easily earn several thousand dollars a month. However, the good times don’t last: in February of this year, Emily Hart’s IG account was already banned, though her Facebook account is still active.

Image source: The Independent, UK Sexy influencer Emily Hart (Emily Hart) supports Trump with MAGA—but it’s actually AI

MAGA AI girls’ operating strategy

Emily Hart’s success is mainly because Sam follows the recommendations of AI tools, targeting older conservative American men with higher discretionary income and higher loyalty as the primary audience, and focusing on the “Make America Great Again” (MAGA) line while also backing Trump.

These AI-generated girls have a specific content template; they are typically set as blonde white women, with occupations often being emergency responders such as nurses, police officers, or firefighters. They wear bikinis printed with the American flag, paired with extreme right-wing remarks that support gun ownership, oppose abortion, or oppose immigration.

Sam revealed that because social media algorithms favor controversial content, these posts not only attract conservative supporters but also draw liberals to leave comments criticizing them—thereby significantly boosting engagement rates.

This is an attention-harvesting strategy that combines patriotism and soft porn: creators attract attention through political fervor, and ultimately funnel followers to monetize it on paid platforms.

However, because the well-known adult platform OnlyFans strictly requires creators to be real humans, these AI creators usually direct their fans to the Fanvue platform, which accepts AI-generated content.

From traffic monetization to information warfare—virtual influencers are flooding in with hidden concerns

Before Wired reported on Emily Hart, the Washington Post also reported in March about Jessica Foster, an AI virtual female soldier who had taken a photo with Trump and Russian President Putin. In just 4 months, that account attracted more than 1 million followers.

Image source: Jessica Foster / AI virtual influencer / The AI virtual female soldier Jessica Foster’s account attracted over 1 million followers in 4 months

Although Jessica Foster’s IG account has been banned, these MAGA AI girls still raise concerns among experts.

Brookings Institution research fellow Valerie Wirtschafter said that many followers simply don’t care whether these influencers are real; they only care that the content aligns with their own political identity. Assistant professor Joan Donovan at Boston University warned that accounts like this are easy to set up and come with clear profit incentives.

After all, the biggest risk of these AI accounts is that they could be transformed into tools of information warfare—turning into bot-style armies that spread political propaganda and misinformation—while also creating an unprecedented crisis of trust and social problems for online communities.

Further Reading:
The Classic Series》AI-generated images spreading with false claims after Taiwan people littering at Tokyo Dome, and the rumor-makers have already been listed as foreign-influence accounts banned from entering

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