AI-Nourished Alternative Universe in which Maga features own miles, thrive on YouTube
If there is a feeling that people sometimes live in their own universes, it is not so far from the truth. A New Mother Jones Report Dig a surprisingly population world of Pro-Maga, AI generated videos that have carved a niche on YouTube by turning the most r/thathappned-Sos stories in content that boomers and other people need some van, joy.
The story emphasizes some of the largest offenders, accounts such as Elite Stories and Mr. Robe Stories, along with a selection of others who have created an alternative universe for Mag. The profile uploads videos that are clean AI SLOP from beginning to end: AI story telling a fully crafted story with AI -generated images sprinkled to illustrate it. Videos are usually performed for 10 to 40 minutes – long enough to get into several ads to make some money. And as Mother Jones indicatesSome of the videos are really monetized.
Elite stories Since then, he has disappeared from the platform – apparently banned by YouTube in response to Mother Jones’ reporting – but a cache version of a YouTube account that appears in Google, shows that the account has had more than 160,000 followers at the time of removal. An archived version of the account shows sampling from the videos you can find there: “A little girl asks Trump for God – his answer brings her to tears.” Other videos show General Prosecutor Pam Bondi and Clint Eastwood for some reason.
Stories of d -n robe (What a name, by the way) is also down, but there were over 41,000 subscribers and providing a collection of similar stories tilted to people who are mistaken for figures from the whole Trump universe, just to be struck by their 150 IQ characters such as Baron Trump and the White House Press Carolin Levi.
Some of the stories of G -n Robe upload only a few hundred views, such as “Carolyn Levitus clapping mercilessly, after Michelle Obama makes fun of Donald Trump,” which is really just crazy nonsense of nonsense that has obviously not resonated with the audience. Others, however, accumulate more than a million views. “Barron Trump stands out when a professor makes fun of Melania – his answer shocked everyone” breaks the Million Clock brand and is filled with comments from people who are more than happy to accept the story as a fact.
“Barron is so respectful and a young man raised well. His parents should be proud!” The general comment is. “I respect Baron so much and my opinion of a professor is down again!” Another said. To be fair to the upload account, it seems that all videos show a refusal at the beginning of the video that it notes that they are entirely works of fiction. But when people want to believe that it is true, they are happy to ignore the warning message with a length of one and take the next half hour content as an gospel.
Almost as disturbing as the videos themselves and commentators who want to believe that the stories are real are the ads that are served on them. When watching these videos in incognito mode (I’m not trying to fuck my own algorithm * that * bad), they served me mostly pseudoscientific garbage for Alzheimer’s disease, including what claims that the condition is caused mainly by drinking water at the wrong temperature.
Earlier this week, YouTube issued a statement Supporting the No Fakes Act of 2025, a bill proposed that will establish protection for the voice and visual likeness of people who can be duplicated by generative AI instruments. But it seems that the platform has a lot of work to moderate AI content.
YouTube spokesman said to Gizmodo: “Our community guidelines apply to all YouTube content, including AI content generated. In this case, we have stopped the channel in question to violate our spam policies. Our privacy process can also be used by someone.