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AI Stars Steal Millions While Humans Beg for Credit

“AI feels safer because it doesn’t bring ego, conflict, or unpredictability.”

Photographer: Steph Meade

The headline flashed across my phone at 2:14 a.m. A three-million-dollar record deal for a vocalist who has never tasted late night eats at 3 a.m. after a session, never felt the sting of a label exec “forgetting” to route royalties, never had to choose between rent and studio time.

We keep asking why the machines are taking the mic, but we never ask why the room was emptied of humans in the first place. As AI-generated artist Xania Monet makes headlines with a reported $3 million record deal, filmmaker and entrepreneur Allendra Royal-Freeman says the industry’s growing reliance on artificial performers exposes a much deeper problem.

Allendra Royal-Freeman, the cinematographer who once made Beyoncé’s halo look like sunrise shares, “The industry isn’t choosing AI because artists lack talent,” she said. “It’s choosing AI because the system for managing artists is broken.”

“When your work and behaviour are visible, you rise to your best.”

Allendra built Forreels, a free platform that treats transparency like sunlight: neither asking permission, nor offering apology. “The problem isn’t the presence of AI,” Allendra says. “The problem is the absence of structure. When the system supports creators, the art improves. When the art improves, culture evolves. And when culture evolves, the world feels more alive.” Verified profiles, escrow-secured payments, reviews you can’t delete when guilt catches up. “Imagine living in a glass house,” she told me. “When your work and behaviour are visible, you rise to your best.”

Forreels provides verified profiles, project management tools, reviews, escrow-secured payments, messaging, and location bookings in a single platform. The goal is to protect both creators and executives by making every stage of production transparent.

We agree the algorithm has no childhood trauma to monetize, no auntie calling at midnight asking why the rent is late. The absence of wounds is not the presence of genius; it is simply the presence of a system that prefers predictability over soul. Allendra spent a decade inside the machine; she knows its pulse.

“The world is running out of systems that know how to treat artists well.”

Allendra is crowdfunding its expansion to Atlanta, Lagos, London, cities where creativity is currency, yet creators are overdrawn. Every pledge is a brick in that glass house, a refusal to let shame become a private dungeon.

 

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