Something deeply unnerving is happening on social media, and this time, it’s unfolding in Oregon. A woman posting what should have been an ordinary TikTok video suddenly found herself staring at a version of herself. Except it wasn’t really her at all. And whatever is going on has people wondering what could be next.
According to the Oregon TikTok user @emlipaa everything seemed routine at first. She had recorded a simple video talking about exercising and lifting weights. She clipped her footage. Checked it, and knew for certain she never paused or drifted off, not once.

But when she went back to review the final cut, an extra clip appeared at the end. A clip of her licking her lips. She saw herself staring blankly and tugging at the straps of her sports bra. Only she never did any of those things.
Already aware that another woman had previously gone viral after TikTok mysteriously attached an AI-generated segment to her own video, the Oregon woman braced herself. She insisted she didn’t dissociate, didn’t freeze.
And definitely didn’t experience any absence seizures, as some commenters used to explain away the earlier case. She knew her body, she knew her senses, and she knew that footage wasn’t real.
Oregon Woman’s Normal Video Suddenly Turns Into Something Disturbing
When she posted the clip to prove she wasn’t making it up, viewers immediately noticed something off. The strange, stiff movements. The unnatural face. The gestures didn’t match human mannerisms. It didn’t take long before people agreed. This was artificially generated.
Even the woman herself pointed out that the face didn’t fully match hers. The mannerisms? Completely wrong. And she emphasized that she wasn’t looking for attention. She didn’t even want it. She simply knew what she filmed, and that last clip wasn’t part of it. Her final reaction summed up what thousands were already thinking.
“They are messing with us and trying to make us go crazy,” one commenter writes.
“This happened to me and I was so terrified,” another shares.
“You know what that reminds me of? ALL OF BRITNEY SPEARS’ VIDEOS,” one more adds.
If AI is able to seamlessly insert footage like this into personal videos without permission… we might actually be in trouble. Once the Oregon woman told her story, the comments section flooded. Women from all over shared similar incidents. Stories of videos being changed, replaced, or appended with clips of themselves doing things they never recorded.
One said her Instagram video morphed into footage of her dyeing her hair, even though she had filmed nothing of the sort. Another described seeing a fast, fleeting image of a version of herself wearing clothes she didn’t own. Others pointed out something even scarier. The strange movements in these AI clips were identical to those in the first TikToker’s video.
Same gestures. The same glitchy motions. Same unsettling energy. Repeat victims. Same pattern. That’s when the question stopped being if something was wrong and became how far this could go. Not everyone believed her at first.
Uncanny, Eerie, and Not Human
Some continued insisting she must have experienced an absence seizure. But she shut that down with confidence. What she saw in that clip was not her. Not her face. It was not her behavior. Not her mannerisms. And judging by how terrified she looked while trying to process what happened, it’s hard not to believe her.
The Oregon woman’s experience isn’t just creepy. It’s a warning siren. AI inserting fabricated footage directly into personal videos crosses a line none of us were prepared for. And with multiple women reporting nearly identical incidents, the fear is no longer hypothetical.
If apps can quietly slip AI-generated versions of you into your own content without your involvement… what happens when this becomes more widespread? When the tech gets more realistic?
