If your feed lately has been full of gorgeous people getting “caught” on baseball stadium cameras, you’re not alone. The viral AI baseball trend has officially taken over social media — and now Arab influencers are hopping on it too.
The trend reportedly started in South Korea after an X user posted an AI-generated video of a woman at a baseball game with the caption “The average Korean woman.” The clip looked exactly like a real sports broadcast camera moment, and people genuinely thought it was real at first. From there, TikTok and Instagram completely ran with it, turning the idea into a full-blown AI trend.
Now, feeds are packed with hyper-realistic videos of people casually watching baseball games while the camera slowly zooms in on them fixing their hair, sipping a drink, or just vibing completely unaware. Except… none of it is actually real. And somehow, that’s exactly why the internet is obsessed with it.
Now, a bunch of Arab creators and influencers are putting their own spin on the trend — and honestly, some of them look a little too believable.
Perry Eissa
Fashion girlies were never going to skip this trend, and Perry Eissa made sure of that. Known for her chic fashion and beauty content, Perry brought major polished-main-character energy to the AI baseball universe.
The Egyptian influencer, who’s also the cofounder of Ness Communications and the mom behind BFF Society, turned the trend into what basically looked like a luxury campaign shot straight from a stadium VIP section.
Louai Alama
Louai Alama gave the trend a luxury cool-kid twist. The entrepreneur and son of Ragheb Alama naturally fit the whole “mysterious attractive person spotted at the game” aesthetic the internet has been obsessed with.
Between his fashion-forward image and lifestyle branding background, the AI baseball trend honestly feels right up his alley.
Donia Atef
Fashion and beauty creator Donia Atef brought effortless cool-girl energy to the trend. As co-owner of Nuude Apparel, her content already lives in that aesthetic-driven world, so the AI baseball moment blended right into her feed.
Mohamed Farag
Travel creator and entrepreneur Mohamed Farag also joined the AI baseball wave, bringing his signature cinematic lifestyle energy with him.
Known for his travel content with wife Lina Tahtawy, Farag’s take on the trend looked less like a random fan cam and more like a Netflix sports documentary moment.
Youssef Haron
Youssef Haron also jumped in.
The Egyptian model and actor made the AI-generated stadium moment look surprisingly real — like someone the broadcast camera would actually zoom in on during a tense ninth inning.
Merna Cherif
If there’s anyone the trend feels made for, it’s probably Merna Cherif. The Fashion Nova ambassador and content creator leaned fully into the glamorous “camera accidentally found me” aesthetic — and it worked perfectly.
Her version of the trend had the exact soft-glam, influencer-off-duty vibe that TikTok can’t seem to get enough of right now.

Conclusion
The AI baseball trend might be random, but that’s kind of what makes it fun. One minute it was a viral post from South Korea, and the next minute influencers across the Arab world were turning themselves into “accidental” stadium celebrities.
And honestly? With how realistic these clips look, don’t be surprised if people start believing every attractive person shown on a stadium jumbotron is AI-generated now.
At the same time, the trend has also sparked conversations around AI and social media authenticity. Some people love the creativity and cinematic vibe of it all, while others think it’s slightly unsettling how easily AI can blur the line between what’s real and what isn’t.
Either way, the AI baseball era is clearly having its moment — but the real question is: are people genuinely into the trend, or are we all just collectively fascinated by how convincing AI has become?
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