NEED TO KNOW

  • A 22-year-old Indian medical student built fake MAGA influencer "Emily Hart" using Google Gemini.
  • Gemini allegedly flagged the "MAGA/conservative niche" as a "cheat code" — Google disputes the framing.
  • The account hit 10,000 Instagram followers in a month before Wired exposed it.

WASHINGTON, DC (TDR) — A 22-year-old Indian medical student used Google's Gemini AI chatbot to build a fake blonde MAGA influencer that pulled thousands of dollars a month from conservative men before Wired unmasked the operation Tuesday.

The big picture: The case exposes how generative AI, engagement-driven platforms, and ideological tribalism now intersect to monetize political identity itself — and how little infrastructure exists to stop it.

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  • AI-generated personas targeting partisan audiences are proliferating faster than platform detection
  • The creator, identified only as "Sam," told Wired he's now back to medical school, having already cashed out

Why it matters: Real American consumers paid real money — for merchandise, subscriptions, and AI-generated nude content — to a person they believed shared their values and nationality.

  • Subscribers to "Emily's" Fanvue account paid for explicit images generated by Grok AI, not Gemini
  • Buyers of "PTSD: Pretty Tired of Stupid Democrats" shirts funded a foreign medical education while believing they were supporting an American conservative

Driving the news: The sequence matters — Sam tried generic "hot girl" content first and flopped, then asked an AI chatbot how to stand out.

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  • Gemini allegedly told him the conservative audience has "higher disposable income and is more loyal"
  • Within one month of launching in January, @emily_hart.nurse hit 10,000 followers
  • Reels pulled 3 million to 10 million views, per Sam's claims to Wired
  • Sam told Wired he spent "30 to 50 minutes" daily on the operation

What they're saying: Sam's contempt for his audience is part of the record. Google's rebuttal is too.

  • Sam, AI influencer creator — "The MAGA crowd is made up of dumb people—like, super dumb people. And they fall for it."
  • Gemini spokesperson, to the Daily Beast — "Gemini is designed to answer your requests without conveying a particular set of beliefs."
  • Sam also tried a liberal version of the scam and said it failed: "Democrats know that it's AI slop, so they don't engage as much."

Yes, but: The "dumb MAGA" framing is doing heavy lifting in every headline — and it's not the whole story.

  • Sam's liberal account failed largely because engagement-farming rage-bait tactics work across the political spectrum when the target audience is older and less digitally fluent
  • AI-generated influencers have duped liberal audiences too — just with different packaging

Between the lines: The story most outlets are telling is about conservative gullibility. The story they're not telling is about platform architecture.

  • Instagram's algorithm rewarded rage-bait engagement regardless of source authenticity, as it's designed to do
  • Fanvue explicitly permits AI-generated content — the business model assumes the market, it doesn't resist it
  • Google shipped a chatbot that will coach a user on which political tribe to exploit, then issued a statement saying it answers "without conveying a particular set of beliefs"

What's next:

  • No indication Sam faces legal consequences in India or the US
  • Platform policies on AI-generated political personas remain largely unenforced
  • Similar accounts like jessicaa.foster continue operating with over one million followers

If a chatbot can identify which political tribe is easiest to monetize, and a platform rewards the content anyway, whose accountability gap is this — the user's, the algorithm's, or the company that shipped both?

Sources

This report was compiled using reporting from Wired, The Daily Beast, NewsX, and Free Press Journal.

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