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Saturday 13 June 2026 12:10:25 GMT
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A minute-long clip of a Will Smith concert is blowing up online for all the wrong reasons, with people accusing him of using AI to generate fake crowds filled with fake fans carrying fake signs. In the last day, the story’s been covered by Rolling Stone, VIBE, NME, Cosmopolitan, The Daily Mail, The Independent, Mashable, and Consequence of Sound. And it definitely looks terrible! The faces have all the characteristics of AI slop, with familiar artifacts like uncanny features, smeared faces, multiple fingers/limbs, and nonsensical signage. “From West Philly to West Swig̴̙̕g̷̤̔͜y”? The crowds are real. Every person you see in the video above started out as real footage of real fans, sourced from multiple Will Smith concerts during his recent European tour. That explains why the entire YouTube Shorts video has that smeary look to it that isn’t present throughout the copy posted on Instagram, but both versions have those terrible audience shots with AI artifacts and garbled signage. After looking at it, I believe that Will Smith’s team was using a generative video model — but not to create entirely new audience footage, like most people suspect. Instead, they started with photos shot by their official tour photographers, and used those photos in Runway, Veo 3, or a similar image-to-video model to create a short animated clip suitable for a concert montage. Let’s go back to the crowd photo from Paléo in Switzerland:  Two Levels of AI Enhancement So if these fans aren’t AI-generated fakes, what’s going on here? The video features real performances and real audiences, but I believe they were manipulated on two levels: Will Smith’s team generated several short AI image-to-video clips from professionally-shot audience photos YouTube post-processed the resulting Shorts montage, making everything look so much worse Conclusion Virtually all of the commenters on YouTube, Reddit, and X believe this was fake footage of fake fans, generated by Will Smith’s team to prop up a lackluster tour. Like the faces in the video, the truth is blurry. The crowds were real, but the videos were manipulated: first by Will Smith’s team, and then without asking, by YouTube. We can debate the ethics of using an image-to-video model to animate photos in this way, but I think it’s meaningfully different than what most people were accusing Will Smith of doing here: using generative AI video to fake a sold-out crowd of passionate fans.
A minute-long clip of a Will Smith concert is blowing up online for all the wrong reasons, with people accusing him of using AI to generate fake crowds filled with fake fans carrying fake signs. In the last day, the story’s been covered by Rolling Stone, VIBE, NME, Cosmopolitan, The Daily Mail, The Independent, Mashable, and Consequence of Sound. And it definitely looks terrible! The faces have all the characteristics of AI slop, with familiar artifacts like uncanny features, smeared faces, multiple fingers/limbs, and nonsensical signage. “From West Philly to West Swig̴̙̕g̷̤̔͜y”? The crowds are real. Every person you see in the video above started out as real footage of real fans, sourced from multiple Will Smith concerts during his recent European tour. That explains why the entire YouTube Shorts video has that smeary look to it that isn’t present throughout the copy posted on Instagram, but both versions have those terrible audience shots with AI artifacts and garbled signage. After looking at it, I believe that Will Smith’s team was using a generative video model — but not to create entirely new audience footage, like most people suspect. Instead, they started with photos shot by their official tour photographers, and used those photos in Runway, Veo 3, or a similar image-to-video model to create a short animated clip suitable for a concert montage. Let’s go back to the crowd photo from Paléo in Switzerland: Two Levels of AI Enhancement So if these fans aren’t AI-generated fakes, what’s going on here? The video features real performances and real audiences, but I believe they were manipulated on two levels: Will Smith’s team generated several short AI image-to-video clips from professionally-shot audience photos YouTube post-processed the resulting Shorts montage, making everything look so much worse Conclusion Virtually all of the commenters on YouTube, Reddit, and X believe this was fake footage of fake fans, generated by Will Smith’s team to prop up a lackluster tour. Like the faces in the video, the truth is blurry. The crowds were real, but the videos were manipulated: first by Will Smith’s team, and then without asking, by YouTube. We can debate the ethics of using an image-to-video model to animate photos in this way, but I think it’s meaningfully different than what most people were accusing Will Smith of doing here: using generative AI video to fake a sold-out crowd of passionate fans.

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