fb

This AI influencer charges over $10,000 per Instagram post and has an 8-figure net worth

She has millions of followers on social media and makes thousands of dollars posting. There's just one catch, she's not real.

Published on Jul 31, 2023 at 3:42PM (UTC+4)

Last updated on Aug 1, 2023 at 1:13PM (UTC+4)

Edited by Kate Bain
Lil Miquela - virtual influencer making millions

This influencer charges more than $10,000 per Instagram post and has an eight-figure net worth. 

She goes by Lil Miquela online and has 3.6 million followers on TikTok and another 2.7 million on Instagram. 

It all sounds pretty straightforward until you realize she’s not human.

READ MORE! Jake Paul gifts personal barber incredible new Rolex

Miquela is the result of some very clever AI (and person sitting behind the computer coding her). 

She’s one of a growing list of virtual influencers making millions through social media deals with some of the world’s biggest brands including Dior, Chanel, and Alexander McQueen.

Some of these virtual influencers are making more than $8,000 per post, contributing to multi-million-dollar net worths. 

Samsung hired the 19-year-old AI influencer to be one of the faces of its #teamgalaxy campaign in 2019.

This deal alone reportedly net her more than $10 million. 

And before that, the teen starred in a Calvin Klein ad alongside real model Bella Hadid.

Lil Miquela was created by the American AI company Brud

And she’s just one in a growing list of AI influencers, including Imma, Shadu, and Milla Sofia who went viral last week.

Milla Sofia and Lil Miquela look so real that they’re duping thousands of their followers too.

“You should enter the Miss World competition, I’m sure you’ll win,” one man said. 

“Wow, you look fabulous, you’re a beautiful young woman,” another said. 

“You are the perfect female.”

There’s a very good reason companies are turning away from real influencers and towards virtual ones. 

The founder of influencer marketing firm IZEA, Ted Murphy, said they would eventually take over the advertising landscape.

“They can be in multiple places at once, speak any language, perform incredible feats, and even undergo a total redesign at will,” he told The Sun

“This offers boundless creative potential.” 

You might be interested in

Related Articles

Man finds rare 1982 Corvette abandoned in a barn for 42 years
Check out Mark Zuckerberg’s new $300 million 'Launchpad' superyacht
Balenciaga and Mercedes AMG have a luxury mask called the Infinity Face Shield
Residents of this town in California park airplanes in front of their houses instead of cars
This solar-powered CyberTrailer camper attachment is inspired by the Tesla Cybertruck
Meta's chief AI scientist predicts smartphones will be obsolete within 10-15 years
World's fastest electric surfboard is controlled by remote
Robo-taxis are now driving around on the roads in Las Vegas