TLDR
An AI-generated MAGA “dream girl” named Jessica Foster charmed a million followers, then vanished, leaving insiders rattled about how seductive deepfakes could shape politics.
To one million Instagram followers, Jessica Foster seemed like the perfect conservative fantasy. A statuesque blonde in Army fatigues, high heels on the tarmac, a slicked-back ponytail beside President Donald Trump, Greenland missions with female comrades, and endless selfies framed by fighter jets. She smiled through every hardship, every staged moment of patriotic grit.

Her comments were flooded with single men asking how to meet her. Her access looked impossibly VIP. The aesthetic was part Fox News glamour, part recruiting poster, and part backstage military pass. For months, her audience believed they were watching a real woman living a real, star-spangled life.
She was not. Jessica Foster never existed outside a hard drive. The account was a total fabrication, a digital siren created entirely with artificial intelligence that went live in December 2025 with a knowing two-word bio: “America First.”
Almost overnight, the profile became a shrine for MAGA loyalists. Political eye candy had always been part of the entertainment machinery around campaigns, but Foster belonged to a new, synthetic class. Across the web, creators were experimenting with a more provocative strategy marketed under one irresistible label: “Patriot Babes.”
In Foster’s case, more than 50 deepfake photos and clips placed her in dizzying scenarios. She was “spotted” at diplomatic gatherings with Vladimir Putin and Volodymyr Zelensky, positioned next to First Lady Melania Trump, and even standing near Lionel Messi. One image showed her beside former Venezuelan president Nicolas Maduro shortly after his capture, as if she were a player in geopolitical theater.

The captions flirted shamelessly with her mostly male audience. “[Good morning] patriots, why can’t I get a [good morning] text every morning from patriots?” read one. Another video, with Foster in a combat helmet and tactical vest, ran under the line, “Best job in the world.” Curated galleries labeled “training” and “dailyarmy” completed the illusion of a devoted soldier who just happened to pose like a pinup.
Behind the patriotic polish sat a business model. The AI beauty funnelled besotted followers to an OnlyFans account, steering political lust behind a paywall. A spokesperson for OnlyFans confirmed the profile was removed for violating rules requiring verifiable human users, not digital inventions.

Still, thousands of commenters treated Foster as flesh and blood. That naive devotion has become the most uncomfortable part of the story. Political insiders told the Daily Mail US that they worry voters are now vulnerable to influencers who exist only as lines of code. Reaction inside Trump-world, according to those sources, is far from unified.
One young administration official was harsh, saying, “Those men don’t deserve voting rights.” A legal source close to Trump shrugged it off, insisting “all news is good news.” A female administration official folded sexism and exasperation together, telling the outlet, “Well, men are all ridiculous across the political aisle. They see what they want to see. They probably didn’t stop following her after they found out she wasn’t real. But it does go to show how strong the MAGA movement is.”
Foster’s Instagram vanished after roughly four months, leaving no public trace and no confirmed mastermind. Yet the aesthetic she helped popularize has already migrated. Deepfake clips featuring glamorous “Iranian female soldiers” and fighter pilots now circulate online, pushing pro-Iran messages even though real women cannot hold those roles there. Another deleted account showed a curvy brunette touring SpaceX with Elon Musk, another fantasy carefully staged for maximum male attention.
The White House did not comment on the original report. Outside Washington, Jessica Foster feels like a funhouse reflection of older pinup eras, when service members tucked photos of actresses into lockers and war bonds were sold with a smile. The new twist is that the modern bombshell can be perfectly loyal, perfectly available, and perfectly unreal.
For men who once thought a follow or a DM might lead to something more, all that remains is a ghost account and the uneasy knowledge that the woman who knew exactly what they wanted was never there at all.
Would you trust a political influencer whose face you only know from a screen, or does the rise of AI-made “Patriot Babes” change how you scroll?