Why Kevin Hart’s “Zambian Twin” Proves April Fools’ Day May No longer Be Funny

Tricking people in early spring has always been good for a laugh. The rise of artificial intelligence might be anything but funny.

The pace at which social media videos go viral and then are forgotten about makes 24-hour news cycles seem downright glacial. So youโ€™ll wonder why weโ€™re bringing up this TikTok clip from two years ago, where comedian and actor Kevin Hart helped blow up a creator by acknowledging how much the guy actually looks like him.

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Stefon Diggs and Cardi B Viral Boat Video Prompts Response from Patriots Coach
Stefon Diggs and Cardi B Viral Boat Video Prompts Response from Patriots Coach

First of all, if you are regular on social, you know how something older becomes viral again and the video of the โ€œZambia manโ€ who looks exactly like Kevin has resurfaced on Tiktok. But what a difference two year makes.

Tiktok and its AI filters, which seem to get better and more real by the week (donโ€™t believe us? check out this video The Root created a few weeks ago), has showed us what deep fake really looks like. So in the past two years since Hartโ€™s impersonator showed up on Tiktok with his convincing filter (thatโ€™s the consensus) weโ€™ve seen deep fakes that make his attempt look like childโ€™s play. And whatโ€™ scary is itโ€™s only getting worse. Buckle up.

Itโ€™s April Foolโ€™s Day, and this might be the last year that April 1 is truly funny anymore because of how quickly artificial intelligence is being developed. If old school lookalikes like Bronx Obama were entertaining, the current era of deepfake videosโ€“which use algorithms to create images, video and even dialogue thatโ€™s nearly indistinguishable from the actual person being mimickedโ€“is downright scary. And with new forms of AI growing more powerful seemingly by the day, April Foolsโ€™ just might take on a more pernicious meaning in the future.

Think a video going viral of a comedian making a racist or misogynistic joke during a performance that never happened. Think political operatives making videos of their opponents giving out false information on voting rules in a state like Florida, where a newly-created election police force has already locked up people who had been told they were eligible to vote when they apparently werenโ€™t. Think the ability to manufacture video evidence of just about anybody, doing or saying anything, and harnessing social media to spread that footage to as many peopleโ€“or to a specific, targeted fewโ€“in seconds. April Foolโ€™s indeed.

Straight From The Root

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