WITH MOM AT THE WATER PARKLast year we already shared some of her videos.
A mother at a water park with her son, enjoying the day, playing in the water — an
apparently innocent scene. The difference was her:
very attractive, wearing a minimal bikini, aware of the camera and
the reaction it triggers. The contrast did the rest.
The videos
went viral. Millions of views,
massive attention and, as a logical consequence,
more followers on her blue account. The
family context was the wrapper; the
real spotlight was on her. And it worked.
This year, after checking her profile again, the story repeats itself.
Same setting,
same formula,
same type of content. The kid has grown… and
so have her followers. When something works, the natural thing to do is to
stick with it. The internet rewards repetition when the mix is right.
There’s nothing
explicit in the videos. Nothing really “happens.” And yet,
there’s something else. Something that’s not in what takes place, but in
how it’s framed and
why it’s consumed. The water park is almost an
excuse. The video lives in that
blurry line between the everyday and the calculated.
From there,
everyone draws their own conclusions. About
exposure, about
context, about whether everything is acceptable when the content is “
apparently” innocent. This isn’t an accusation or a verdict. It’s simply
putting the pieces on the table and looking at the whole picture.
I don’t judge.
I just share.
# Watch video
The slow-motion moment of the day.
ERICH CAPARAS’ SURPRISE-ENDING TRANSITIONSThere’s a phrase you see all the time on TikTok and Instagram:
“wait for it”.
It’s no coincidence. It’s pure strategy.
With the insane amount of videos we watch every day, if in the
first two seconds nothing grabs you, you swipe to the next one without even thinking. That’s why so many creators warn you: hey,
stay until the end, something worth it happens at the end.
It’s not a written rule, and it’s not a forced trend. It’s simply
the natural language of social media. A way of telling you: trust me, don’t leave just yet.
The videos I’m sharing today are exactly about that.
They’re created with AI by
Erich Caparas and they don’t warn you about anything, but I will:
they all have an ending. And it’s worth waiting for it.
I’m also leaving you his Instagram account, because it’s amazing to see how, video after video, he’s been
improving the realism, the animation and the overall quality. It’s almost like watching the
evolution of AI in real time, in the hands of someone who really knows what he’s doing.
So now you know: don’t scroll so fast.
This time,
wait for it.
# Watch videos
Theseus after defeating the Minotaur.