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Tabitha Brown, the Emmy-winning actress and New York Times best-selling author, isn’t worried that AI influencers will replace...
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Tabitha Brown Isn’t Worried AI Influencers Will Replace Her—Here’s Why Authenticity Wins
May 15 -
2 minutes, 33 seconds
Why Tabitha Brown Isn’t Afraid of AI Influencers
Tabitha Brown, the Emmy-winning actress and New York Times best-selling author, isn’t worried that AI influencers will replace her. In a world where brands are rushing to create synthetic influencers and digital clones, she believes her genuine human connection is impossible to automate. The key? Being real, spontaneous, and rooted in who she is.
AI Influencers Are Growing—But Consumers Aren’t Buying In
AI has made it easier than ever to manufacture presence. Companies now create AI influencers to produce perfect content and connect with audiences at speeds no human can match. But here’s the problem: consumers are pushing back.
- More than 4 in 10 people disapprove of brands using AI influencers, calling them “too fake.”
- 41% worry AI influencers could be misleading, according to PR Week.
- Even CEOs like Customers Bank’s Sam Sidhu have used AI clones for earnings calls—only to face trust questions afterward.
When a robot delivers your message, what’s left to trust? No amount of automation can replace real emotion, nuance, or human understanding.
Authenticity Is Your Career Superpower
I asked Tabitha Brown directly: “Are you worried an AI influencer could take over your brand?”
“Can’t nobody be Tab but me,” she said with her signature Southern charm. “I do things in the moment. When it hits me, I grab my phone and record. AI has to be planned, programmed, told what to do. That’s not real connection.”
For Brown, her edge comes from spontaneity, personality, and spiritual connection. “I allow God to deposit inside me, and I share that. That’s a different take.”
The Human Connection Advantage
This idea isn’t just Tabitha’s. Leaders across industries agree:
- Dr. Ben Goertzel, father of AGI, says human relationships matter more than ever.
- beehiiv co-founder Tyler Denk warns founders lose revenue when they stop sharing their own content.
- Google’s VP of recruiting Brian Ong says human-first skills like collaboration and curiosity are hiring green flags.
How to Stay Irreplaceable in an AI World
In a digital culture full of:
- Inflated, identical resumes designed for ATS systems
- Bland LinkedIn comments that just repeat the post
- Predictable “thought leadership” patterns
- Soulless corporate videos
Your unique advantage is surprisingly simple: Be yourself.
Your personality, your in-the-moment reflections, your quirky experiences—these are hard for a robot to copy. AI can help you produce more content, but producing more doesn’t build trust. Trust comes from vulnerability, memorability, and genuine connection.
The Bottom Line: Nothing Replaces Real Connection
Tabitha Brown envisions a world where AI creates jobs and makes businesses efficient. But replacing creators entirely? She doesn’t believe it will happen—not because it’s impossible, but because real rapport and connection are too valuable.
“Stay true to who you are,” she reminds professionals. “Because nothing can replace human connection.”
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