• News
  • lifestyle
  • trending
  • Meet viral ‘conjoined twins’ Valeria and Camila: AI twins deny being fake, but expert calls out the “perfect beauty” scam

Meet viral ‘conjoined twins’ Valeria and Camila: AI twins deny being fake, but expert calls out the “perfect beauty” scam

Meet viral ‘conjoined twins’ Valeria and Camila: AI twins deny being fake, but expert calls out the “perfect beauty” scam
A viral social media account featuring 'single-bodied twins' Valeria and Camila, who claim to be conjoined twins born in Florida, has captivated users. Despite their claims of being real and not AI-generated, an expert debunks the illusion, stating the hyper-stylized and flawless images are clearly fabricated for engagement.
Artificial intelligence is expanding in nearly every realm of life, be it in the form of AI assistants, creating visual content, or streamlining preferences on social media, automating daily tasks, and whatnot.But sometimes this AI-generated content is so overpowering and realistic-looking that it becomes next to impossible to figure out whether it's real or unreal.Recently, a social media account of single-bodied twins went viral, racking up followers and traction on their posts consistently.
Meet viral ‘conjoined twins’ Valeria and Camila: AI twins deny being fake, but expert calls out the “perfect beauty” scam
Meet viral ‘conjoined twins’ Valeria and Camila (Photo: @rodryanshow/ X)

The viral 'Twins' - Valeria and Camila

Valeria and Camila burst onto Instagram with a bio reading, "two heads but one vibe," posting fashion shots in stylish resort wear from Miami. With over 100 posts on TikTok and Telegram, they instantly amassed around 2,80,000+ followers since late 2025.They claim to be 25 years old, born in Florida, "born this way" with fused spines, getting uneasy glances from the public, but loving life. These ‘twins’ said that they do not wish to have any separation surgery for them, and they'd not have it "any other way."
Users asked questions about their real existenceIn Stories Q&As, they insist, “We move, we talk, we’re obviously not AI.”
Detailed tales of surgeries and scars aim to convince. Many other comments were full of praise, but with suspicion: "this real??" and "AI" everywhere.Unlike upfront AI accounts, they stay vague, fuelling the buzz. While some social media users praise their beauty; others call them BS, like one user said: “Guys, this is AI. Why is everyone believing this BS?”

But.. expert debunks the illusion

AI prompt engineer Andrew Hulbert told the Daily Mail it's all fabricated. “The narrative is created to hype potential interaction. It's the perfect story on the perfect person to give the perfect result of engagement, which is what the user is aiming for,” he explained.Hulbert flags the content as "clearly AI-generated" images, hyper-stylised bodies matching "friends," no flaws. “These images are the personification of what the media thinks beauty is, and there isn't a flaw amongst any of them,” he added, calling them ‘unrealistic.’

Why is it going viral

The account is going viral because such realistic-looking content is very rare and unique on social media, since users only want to see something as quirky as ‘walking and talking’ conjoined twins as influencers.
End of Article
Follow Us On Social Media