Skip to content
Jason Kelce

Jason Kelce is getting swarmed by AI Bot accounts operating out of Vietnam and people are too stupid to realize it’s fake

The AI apocalypse creeps closer by the day, and this week, it claimed another victim: Jason Kelce.

Fake quotes have been circulating everywhere, but the most viral one involves Bad Bunny and his upcoming Super Bowl halftime show. The supposed quote reads, “If Bad Bunny doesn’t belong at the Super Bowl, then maybe those saying it don’t belong in America’s future.”

When I first saw it, I immediately scrolled past because, unlike half the internet, I’m not a complete idiot — it was obviously fake.

Unfortunately, plenty of people didn’t catch on. Turns out the whole thing was cooked up by about seven dudes in Vietnam running a fake Eagles fan page on Facebook.

Jason Kelce’s response to the fake quotes

Shop Eagles Gear Here

II haven’t seen nearly as much of this nonsense on X as I have on Facebook.

Zuckerberg’s platform is, for all intents and purposes, a completely broken product. While he’s busy trying to win the AI race, Facebook has become a full-blown disinformation machine. And we’re not just talking about people spreading rumors — we’re talking about entirely fabricated quotes and, in some cases, AI-generated photos of celebrities and athletes doing things that never actually happened.

I wrote about this a few months ago when an Eagles fan page started posting AI images of players supposedly helping children during the Texas floods. The fact that these pages exist isn’t even surprising anymore — what’s wild is how many people keep sharing this garbage without realizing it’s completely fake.

Here’s a quick look at some of the posts from the “Go Philadelphia Eagles” Facebook page. The name alone should be a red flag, but somehow, these clowns have racked up over 33,000 followers.

This is just the tip of the iceberg. The entire account is filled with this garbage — photos of Jason Kelce paired with fake quotes that link to some sketchy website practically begging to infect your laptop with a virus.

Thankfully, it doesn’t take much digging to see where the people behind it are operating from. And, shocker — the account is primarily run out of Vietnam.

Good stuff. I love foreign influence!

Someone has to get this bullshit off the internet. We’ve got to nip it in the bud before it spirals into something that actually impacts someone’s life. Right now, it feels mostly harmless — just fake quotes slapped on pictures of Jason Kelce — and he’s probably not losing any sleep over it. I’m sure his team knows it’s all nonsense.

But think about your parents for a second — or really, anyone over 45. They have no idea this stuff is fake. Their brains just aren’t wired to spot AI-generated content or bot accounts. You know how many times my dad has proudly shown me some politically charged “news” that was completely fabricated? Too many.

And I genuinely feel bad for him — and for every parent out there who thinks Jason Kelce is out here sounding off about Bad Bunny, Charlie Kirk, or Chappell Roan. In today’s outrage-fueled internet, it’s not that hard to believe someone as famous as Jason Kelce would say something wild, so they buy into it without question.

My dad’s not even thinking about AI. He just got handed a smartphone one day, made a Facebook account, and now his entire “news feed” is a nonstop stream of fake garbage. To him — and millions of others — this is the news. And it’s all being pumped out by seven guys in a computer lab halfway across the world.

At this point, it’s not just about Jason Kelce. It’s about how easy it’s become to fool people who don’t know any better. The AI apocalypse isn’t some distant threat — it’s already here, and it’s dumbing down the internet one fake quote at a time.

Comments (0)

Leave a Reply

Back To Top

Discover more from The Liberty Line

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading