The original post was in the generic GPT style with weird plasticy people, general incoherent composition, elements that were just straight goofy, Lenin speaking in nordic runes and tongues, and a weird mass-produced slop feel, among other issues. As was mentioned in another comment, the original post felt like the Marvelification of Lenin.
I don’t entirely remember the original (OP updated the picture in the header for anyone confused) but what I remember from it is basically it illustrated Langston Hugh’s poem about Lenin with comic panels.
People look at memes for all of 3 seconds before moving on, this new one in two panels might actually be more effective for that lol. Though of course we can ask if a poem straight up about Lenin will make anyone stop and think, but that’s another topic - what matters is the possibilities this offers. I don’t think most people when they’re scrolling on socials will stop and pass a magnifying glass over every detail of a picture, especially if they can’t readily tell it’s AI (I’m better at it on a computer, phone screens are so small that the inaccuracies mostly disappear personally, but most people now browse the web on smartphones still).
The current piece, or the original post?
The original post was in the generic GPT style with weird plasticy people, general incoherent composition, elements that were just straight goofy, Lenin speaking in nordic runes and tongues, and a weird mass-produced slop feel, among other issues. As was mentioned in another comment, the original post felt like the Marvelification of Lenin.
I don’t entirely remember the original (OP updated the picture in the header for anyone confused) but what I remember from it is basically it illustrated Langston Hugh’s poem about Lenin with comic panels.
People look at memes for all of 3 seconds before moving on, this new one in two panels might actually be more effective for that lol. Though of course we can ask if a poem straight up about Lenin will make anyone stop and think, but that’s another topic - what matters is the possibilities this offers. I don’t think most people when they’re scrolling on socials will stop and pass a magnifying glass over every detail of a picture, especially if they can’t readily tell it’s AI (I’m better at it on a computer, phone screens are so small that the inaccuracies mostly disappear personally, but most people now browse the web on smartphones still).