Chloe VS History: is it AI? The full breakdown.
Chloe VS History is a fully AI-generated influencer who time travels into historical eras in first-person selfie reels. Launched in February 2026 by UK creator Jonathan Laramy on Utopai Studios' PAI engine, she has 624,000 Instagram followers, 100,900 on TikTok, and 334,000 YouTube subscribers, with talent agency Underscore Talent handling her brand deals.
Chloe VS History went from a February 2026 launch to more than 1 million combined followers in about five months, and her Titanic warning reel alone pulled 4.3 million views, per Yahoo Lifestyle.
Follower figures reflect public counts at the last update of this page. Where the real account could not be verified, figures are labeled as reported and no account link is shown.
Why the content actually works.
The growth is not luck. It is a small set of repeatable moves, and every one of them is something you can copy.
One repeatable POV format, run against all of history
Almost every reel is the same sentence with two variables swapped: I tried being a [job] in [year]. Rat catcher in 1849, coal miner in 1905, maid in 1912, Tudor food critic in 1536. The format is instantly readable in the first frame, infinitely repeatable, and history supplies an endless content calendar for free.
First-person selfie camera, not documentary footage
Chloe holds the camera herself inside the scene, like a friend vlogging from Pompeii. That selfie framing turns a history lesson into interest media: viewers get the intimacy of a creator vlog with the spectacle of a period film set, and the person-first framing is what makes people follow the character rather than just watch one clip.
Edutainment hooks that work for both audiences
Each reel opens on the job or era caption plus a visual gag, the rat in hand, the coal-blackened face. History buffs stay for the period detail, casual scrollers stay for the reaction. Teachers reportedly used her clips in classrooms, which tells you the content clears both the entertainment bar and the accuracy-adjacent bar.
A cinematic engine doing the consistency work
The same face, hair, and tattoos survive 1536 Tudor streets, a 1905 Pennsylvania mine, and 1930s stadium crowds. Utopai's PAI system holds the character steady across radically different scenes, the exact problem that kills most home-built AI influencers. Character consistency is the moat; the history angle is the hook.
Cross-platform stacking with YouTube as the long-form home
Instagram and TikTok run the short POV reels while the YouTube channel, 334,000 subscribers, carries longer episodes, and her grid actively cross-promotes it. One persona, one format family, three monetizable audiences instead of one.
What the feed looks like.
Representative frames in the style of Chloe VS History's content.
Build one like Chloe VS History.
You just read the formula. Pick a persona, lock a scene, ship your first reel in minutes.
How Chloe VS History makes money.
Reach is the hard part, and the account has it. These are the streams that turn the audience into revenue, each tagged with its honest status today.
Estimates based on public rate benchmarks for this follower range, not reported earnings.
Yes. Here is how it is made.
Yes, fully AI. Chloe does not exist. Every reel is generated with Utopai Studios' PAI engine, and her bio discloses it with a Powered by PAI 2.0 credit. Sky News revealed in May 2026 that the tattooed time traveller is written and produced by Jonathan Laramy, a British history enthusiast, who confirmed it himself: she's not real.
Strip the character away and the system underneath is simple: a script in a locked voice, an AI rendered persona on a consistent scene, and a daily publishing cadence. That repeatable system, not the specific tools, is the part you can copy, and giving you that system in one platform is exactly what AvatarFactory is built for.
Run the Chloe VS History system in your own niche.
The account above is the proof. This is the step-by-step version of the same playbook, pointed at a niche you pick.
Pick your niche variant
Take the history lane this account proves and angle it: same format, your own twist. A narrower angle beats a broader copy, because the feed rewards accounts it can categorize in one second.
Design your own consistent character with AvatarFactory
Create a persona and lock the look, the voice, and the scene. Consistency is the whole trick: every account on this site grew because viewers recognized it in the first half second.
Study what trends in the niche
Spend a week watching the top accounts in your lane. Note the hooks, the formats, and the lines people quote in comments. You are not inventing a genre, you are entering one that already works.
Batch your first 30 reels
Write 30 scripts against the hooks you collected and render them in one sitting. A full month of content before you post anything removes the daily scramble that kills most new accounts.
Post daily and analyze
One reel a day, every day. After two weeks, double down on the two formats with the best watch time and retire the rest. The data decides, not your taste.
Add monetization at milestones
Affiliate links once engagement is steady, sponsorship outreach around 50K followers, your own product when the audience starts asking for one. Monetizing too early stalls growth; milestones keep the order right.
Path to $3,000/month profit from one AI influencer
| Month | Milestone | Est. monthly revenue |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Character locked, first 30 reels batched and posted | $0 |
| 2 | First reels travel, 5K to 20K followers | $0-100 est. |
| 3 | 25K to 60K followers, affiliate links live | $100-400 est. |
| 4 | 60K to 150K followers, first sponsored deal | $400-1,200 est. |
| 5 | 150K to 300K followers, sponsorships recurring | $1,200-2,200 est. |
| 6 | 300K+ followers, two to three streams running | $3,000 est. |
Realistic scenario, estimated. Results vary with niche, consistency, and execution.
Build your own AI influencer.
The playbook you just read, pointed at your niche. Pick a persona, paste a script, lock a scene, and ship your first reel in under three minutes. We modeled the hooks and formats on 100M+ videos so you start from what works.