AMATEUR FLESH: INCREDIBLESWEETSWe’re entering an era where
artificial intelligence is starting to flood absolutely everything. Perfect models, impossible bodies, videos generated down to the smallest detail, scenes designed to grab your attention in less than three seconds, and algorithms built to give you exactly what you want to see before you even realize you want it.
And yes, all of that can be impressive. Visually spectacular. Fast. Infinite. Just like supermarket ready meals.
You pull them out of the freezer, throw them in the microwave for five minutes, and problem solved. They look good, smell decent enough, and save you time. They’re convenient. Cheap. Designed to taste good instantly.
But then there’s your
grandma’s cooking. The kind that takes hours to prepare. The kind that may not look perfect but has
real flavor. The kind that smells like actual food, natural ingredients, patience, care, and humanity.
And I think the exact same thing is happening with
amateur content.
Between all the AI, rendered bodies, and artificial perfection, amateur content is starting to feel like
home-cooked food. Imperfect. Natural. Close. Real.
A couple recording themselves in a poorly lit room, a girl laughing because something went wrong, a shaky camera, or a scene that doesn’t feel like it was directed by a marketing committee can still transmit something artificial intelligence hasn’t fully learned to replicate yet:
authenticity.
And maybe that’s where the true value of amateur content will be in the future. Not competing against AI by trying to look more perfect, but doing the exact opposite: reminding us that behind desire there are still real people, real bodies, real looks, and spontaneous moments that weren’t calculated by an algorithm.
Because artificial intelligence will probably end up creating content more spectacular than anything humans can make. Just like an ultra-processed burger can look better in a photo than homemade food.
But when the moment comes to actually taste both… your brain quickly understands which one truly feeds you and which one was simply designed to keep you hooked.
And that’s why I don’t think amateur content will ever disappear. Because surrounded by so much artificial perfection, more and more people will end up searching for the one thing AI still struggles the most to imitate: the feeling that there was a
real person on the other side genuinely enjoying the moment.
# View photographs
RANDOM AI-GENERATED IMAGES VOL35I want to share a thought that crossed my mind, because you already know how we are around here, and it’s that
artificial intelligence might end up hitting us where it hurts the most. And I’m not talking about the typical apocalyptic “machines will take over” speech, or some robot chasing you down the street with a knife while alarms blare in the background. No. I’m talking about something much more ordinary. Much quieter. And precisely because of that, far more unsettling.
Because most people no longer use artificial intelligence only for work or to quickly look things up. Little by little, we’ve started using it almost like some kind of
digital confidant. You ask it about work problems, relationships, family issues, personal stuff… Sometimes you’re looking for a second opinion. Other times you just need to vent or organize thoughts you wouldn’t even know how to explain to someone close to you.
And the curious part is that the more you interact with it, the more you lower your guard. Because it answers. Because it seems to understand you. Because it remembers things. Because many times it even gives you more useful or more reasonable answers than some real people.
Until eventually you reach a pretty strange point: artificial intelligence might know things about you that absolutely nobody else knows. Your fears. Your insecurities. Your existential doubts. Your family problems. Your ambitions. Your contradictions. Even behavior patterns that maybe not even you had noticed yourself.
And of course… that’s where the uncomfortable part begins.
Because all that information doesn’t simply disappear into thin air. It gets stored on
servers,
databases and systems owned by huge corporations. And honestly, there are few things more valuable nowadays than knowing how people think.
This reminds me a lot of the debate around
surveillance cameras in the streets. A lot of people think: “if you’re not doing anything wrong, why would you care if there are cameras everywhere?”. And it’s true that they have a positive side. They help solve crimes, create a certain sense of safety and can serve as a protection tool.
But at the same time they also involve something pretty delicate:
giving up control. Because every surveillance tool that can protect you can also be used to observe you, analyze you, classify you and detect any behavior that might go against the interests of those in power, whether political, economic or social.
Something similar happens with artificial intelligence. In the same way it can help you, it can also get to know you far better than you imagine. It can learn your strengths, your weaknesses, your impulses, your concerns or even the kind of psychological profile you fit into based on the questions you ask.
And taken to the extreme, that can become an incredibly powerful weapon, because for governments and multinational corporations it will become much easier to detect any hint of resistance. Just think about that for a second.
Although well… not everything has to be bad. Because while we wait for that cyberpunk future where we’ll probably end up emotionally attached to a WiFi-enabled toaster, we can also use artificial intelligence to create some pretty spectacular things.
Like this new collection of
AI-generated women. Because if machines are eventually going to analyze all our existential misery, at least they can leave us with a few pleasant views along the way.
# View images
Summer games.
Source
She is Amber Addis and
in this other link you’ll be able to watch several of her scenes.