Published on 2026/02/27
ALL IN ON RED VOL6
The day before yesterday we dedicated a post to the
color black.
Black lingerie,
black clothing, creators who started
dressed and ended up taking everything off in front of the camera in
short videos, direct and straight to the point. Just another compilation within those
series that almost create themselves when we start noticing the same
visual pattern repeating again and again.
Yesterday was the exact opposite:
white. It wasn’t random. After black, we looked for
balance.
Compensate. Slow things down. Maintain that kind of
necessary harmony that makes everything feel right. Black and white.
Contrast.
Balance. Universal order restored.
Because when everything leans too far to one side, it starts to feel like something will eventually fail. And you already know how this works: if you don’t balance things out, everything ends up
wobbling.
But today… today isn’t about
balance.
Today is about
red. And red isn’t here to compensate for anything. It’s not trying to restore
cosmic forces or keep the universe stable. The universe can manage just fine on its own for a day.
Red arrives purely out of
impulse.
Because sometimes you don’t choose something based on
logic or editorial consistency. You choose it simply because you
feel like it. Because it stands out. Because it
raises the pulse and instantly changes the tone of everything appearing on screen. Where black suggested and white balanced, red simply
provokes.
So this new installment comes exactly from that idea:
creators dressed in red, short clips lasting
thirty seconds or maybe a minute at most,
fast content, visual and created with no other intention than enjoying the moment.
No
deep message.
No
universal adjustment.
No
spiritual search.
Just one simple decision:
today was a red day.
And absolutely nothing happens if, just this once, the
balance can wait.
# Watch videos

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Twerking.
Published on 2026/02/27
OPEN WAR BETWEEN ARTISTS AND ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE
The war against
AI is no longer quiet. It’s out in the open now. Every day it plays out across comment sections, social media, and endless debates where the real conflict isn’t the technology itself, but the people choosing to
use it.
Because the truth is, the fight isn’t really against
artificial intelligence. Tools don’t threaten anyone on their own. The tension begins when their results start competing with work that once demanded years of
training,
technical skill, and earned
artistic recognition.
For decades, knowing how to draw, design, or create visual pieces was something only a few could truly master. There was status attached to it — respect built through experience inside the
creative world. Now, a clear idea and a few lines of text can generate images that, to many viewers, rival — or sometimes surpass — what previously required a
specialized professional.
And that’s where the clash begins. Not between art and technology, but between
fear and adaptation. Whenever the rules change, someone inevitably feels like they’re losing ground. It happened with
photography, with
digital cinema, with computer-assisted design, and with the arrival of the
internet. And now it’s happening again.
Some of that resistance turns into
valid debate. Another part becomes pure
anger. Insults, dismissive comments, and hostility aimed at creators working with AI — often fueled not just by rejection, but by
uncertainty,
frustration, and the feeling that the world is moving faster than people can adapt.
But history tends to repeat one thing: evolution rarely stops because someone disagrees with it. Humans have always adapted, reshaped professions, and discovered new ways to
create. Some jobs disappear, yes — but new ones inevitably emerge.
And while the argument keeps raging, some creators have chosen a different response. Not endless discussions, but
creation itself.
The author behind these videos has literally turned
hate into raw material. Real insults taken from comment sections transformed into surreal AI-generated visuals:
chewing gum expanding,
waves crashing, flames, smoke, and nature itself reshaping into the same unmistakable gesture.
A simple, sarcastic message: if hate shows up… it can also be
recycled.
Because maybe artificial intelligence isn’t replacing creativity at all. It’s just changing
who gets to create.
And this is simply his answer.
# Watch videos
Are you okay? You seem a little off.
She’s Codi Vore, and
you can watch several of her scenes here.