A $7M Hamptons listing came to me as a folder of beautiful, silent photos. I turned it into a cinematic walkthrough hosted by Lizzie, an AI real estate influencer I built from scratch. Then I made the listing agent himself do the tour: cloned, on camera, in his own voice.
A seven-million-dollar home in the Hamptons arrived as a grid of gorgeous, motionless photos. I rebuilt it as a guided video tour, the kind that actually stops a thumb on a feed, hosted by Lizzie: an AI influencer I created who walks you through the house like she lives there. Then I built a second host, Blake, to push the format further. Then the agent asked the obvious question, could I make him the host? So I cloned his voice and his face, and put him on camera without a camera ever being involved.
No single model does this. I chained photo upscaling, persona generation, scene compositing, motion synthesis, voice cloning, sound design, and a video editor into one repeatable workflow. A folder of stills goes in one end and a finished film comes out the other.
Discovery happens on a feed now. The tour's job is not to close the buyer, it's to stop the scroll and pull people to the listing, where a serious one will study every photo in detail.
High-end property gets discovered on social now. The tour is the thing that stops a thumb and earns the click, not the thing that closes the sale.
AI content dies the second it looks like AI content. The whole game is making it good enough that nobody clocks how it was made.
One host can tour any property. The pipeline does not care which house, so the next listing costs almost nothing to produce.
Cloned once, an agent can front a tour for every future listing without ever setting foot on a set.
No film team, no staging, no scheduling around an empty seven-figure house. Just the photos that already exist.
A month on this made me fluent in video generation, the exact craft that now sits under everything, because every product gets discovered on video.
The agent, exactly the skeptic this should have lost, was genuinely impressed, most of all by his own clone. The bigger return was the month it took: it made me fluent in video generation at a professional level, the skill that now sits under everything I build, because discovery happens on a feed and the feed runs on video.