If you’ve opened TikTok lately, odds are Jake Paul’s doing something absolutely unhinged on your For You Page. Maybe he’s robbing a Sephora in a sequined dress. Maybe he’s being swept into a tornado while dressed like a fairy princess. Maybe he’s filming a “Get Ready With Me” for Thursday Night Football or even dramatically announcing, “I’m gay.” The catch? None of it’s real.
On Thursday, October 9, the 28-year-old YouTuber-turned-boxer took to X (formerly Twitter) to explain the “method to the madness.” Tagging OpenAI’s Sam Altman and his own investing partners, Paul said he’s a “proud OpenAI investor” and revealed he had “agreed to become the first celebrity NIL cameo user and from there things went crazy.”
In just six days, he claimed, his “cameo has generated 1B+ views.” Wrapping up his post with a pat on the back for the creators behind the app, the pro athlete said: “Congrats to the Sora team on a great product and making the internet fun again.”
For anyone new to the chaos, OpenAI’s new Sora 2 app is basically TikTok for AI videos. It lets people “opt in” to something called cameos — short, consent-based clips that allow creators to drop your face into whatever wild scenario they can dream up. You record yourself once, confirm it’s really you, and boom, your digital twin is ready for its close-up. It’s the consent-based spin on deepfakes, and Paul is fully leaning into it.
In fact, the second he opted in, the internet went nuclear. Within hours, AI-generated Jakes were everywhere: applying makeup like a beauty influencer, shoplifting from Taco Bell, and monologuing about life and love under perfect studio lighting. The edits were so realistic that even fans couldn’t tell which clips were fake, and Paul only added fuel by posting his own TikToks captioned, “Which one is AI?”
While fans are eating it up, not everyone’s thrilled about the direction this is heading. Some viewers have called out the clips for playing into tired caricatures and stereotypes — like the overly glam, hyper-dramatic “AI Jake” edits that blur the line between parody and mockery. Others worry that even though Paul consented, Sora’s cameo system could open the door to a flood of look-alike content that isn’t so innocent.
The concern isn’t just about Paul. On October 16, OpenAI pulled videos using Martin Luther King Jr.’s likeness after his estate called them ‘disrespectful,’ prompting the company to tighten rules around historical and public figures.
Ethics aside, it’s a strange new frontier for fame. When a digital clone can go viral faster than the real thing, who controls the narrative — the person, or the platform? Paul’s experiment might be the first mainstream example of a celebrity licensing their face for AI absurdity, but it likely won’t be the last.