Rapsody and AI meet in the worst possible way.
There was a time when scams were easier to detect. But, thanks to artificial intelligence, this is becoming increasingly difficult. Suddenly, one of our most beloved hosts joins the conversation.
Something I’ve seen recently about Rapsody feels different. This feels like a glimpse into the future, and honestly, the future looks rough.
Apparently, someone is using artificial intelligence to use Rapsodi’s likeness to promote a false appearance. From what I’ve seen, the video demo looks believable enough that the average person browsing online probably won’t question it. The meaning is simple: Rapsody should be present at an event. The details almost don’t matter. The important thing is that it’s not real.
If Rapsody hadn’t spoken out, who knows what would have happened next?
People may buy tickets. Of course I will participate. Fans would drive across town and even across state lines. Considering the price of natural gas, can you imagine this is all a scam? Parking area. Hotel room. Then, at the last minute, there would be some mysterious explanation as to why she “didn’t make it.”
We’ve seen this game before.
But artificial intelligence completely changes the scale and breadth of abuse.
It’s sophisticated and intentional enough to force Rapsody into the best “GTFOHWTBS” ever.
One of hip-hop’s most respected lyricists must do just that. Rhapsody is a tie. As far as celebrities go, she’s no Cardi B or Nicki Minaj either. This makes the scam even more insidious. They thought they could keep fans from the past out in the public eye without being noticed.
This is where we are now.
If it could happen to Rapsody, it could happen to anyone.
politician. actor. athlete. Journalists. Priests. teachers. your mother. your children. I. you.
The scariest part isn’t even the technology itself. The scariest thing is how quickly people believe what they see. We’ve been conditioned to trust visuals. A blue checkmark, a film clip, a familiar voice, a recognizable face. Our brains are trained to process these things as evidence. Artificial intelligence exploits this instinct with astonishing accuracy. Then, the opposite happens. We don’t believe anything we see and we don’t trust anything.
Hip-hop has always had an unusual relationship with authenticity. We yell “keep it real” but complain when keeping it real turns sour. The culture really revolves around this push and pull. From the earliest park crowds in the Bronx to today’s age of digital streaming, we’ve been trying to balance it all. Now we are creating this monster.
Artificial intelligence is attacking the very concept of reality itself.
And the law is far from ready for this.
We’re still debating copyright issues while scammers are copying identities on the fly. We’re going to see people create celebrity co-signs, fake endorsements… fake interviews. Barriers to entry are increasingly disappearing, if not already disappearing.
What happens when false political speech starts circulating during an election? What happens when fake news ruins someone’s marriage? Their careers or their stellar reputations? What happens when an independent artist buys a famous artist’s work online. Wait—this has already happened. AllHipHop doesn’t always report for legal reasons, but we’ve received numerous reports of young rappers buying lyrics. Sadly, they also complain that they are the verses of an artificial intelligence, not the artist.
This is now.
Ironically, hip-hop may actually be better prepared for this moment than mainstream American music. We always speak out, like Rap does. The culture has always understood deceit and charlatans – we actually do combat the hustle. We hate the cutting edge. Even though we used to love Pen and Pixel, we also understand image processing. We know both smoke and mirrors. But can hip-hop advance and compete with AI-generated content?
That’s another editorial.
But let me say this: Someone, somewhere has to figure this out. Some of these AI creations are incredible. And I’m not talking about the ridiculous Met Gala photos people concoct in chat. We’re rapidly approaching a point where, without advanced verification tools, the average person (not grandma) won’t be able to tell the difference between real content and artificial content.
This should concern us all.
Rapsodi deserves credit for speaking out immediately. Many artists might ignore it, laugh it off, or get on with their busy lives. Instead, she publicly called for it. This is important. Regards, Rapp.
She’s always been who she is. that.
In a time when nonsense prevails, substance, integrity and truth remain. She represents a kind of artistic honesty that is increasingly rare in modern entertainment. Maybe that’s why this situation is so symbolic. This AI-generated idiot tried it with real AI and it immediately crashed. I’m writing this now – almost a week later – just to make sure someone circles this irresponsible behavior.
This isn’t just satire.
Believe it or not, this is the future knocking on the door of the house we still own.
Tell me what you think in the comments.

Chuck “Jigsaw” Creekmur plays for Rapsody and has a love-hate relationship with AI. Yes, artificial intelligence is used in the article illustrations.

