A 68-second compilation titled “Windy weather going wild” went viral, showing roofs tearing off, luggage flying through the air, and umbrellas flipping inside out. The clip gathered over 6 million views and thousands of reactions — from jokes about flying toilets to genuine concern about safety. But many people asked the obvious question: “Is it fake?”
Our AI video detector highlighted suspicious frames throughout the entire clip — lighting and motion physics looked too cinematic to be real. In several segments, shadows move inconsistently and objects deform mid-air, clear signs of AI-generated video.
AI-generated disasters combine shock value with visual perfection — the recipe for virality. Even though the scenes feel authentic, real windstorms are rarely this choreographed. This mix of real and synthetic clips amplifies anxiety and confusion during natural disaster news cycles.
Use an AI video detector. It scans frame-by-frame for visual inconsistencies that reveal synthetic generation or deepfake stitching.
AI-generated disasters trigger emotional reactions — shock, fear, fascination. That makes them viral across X, TikTok, and YouTube.
Yes. Detectors like isFake.ai analyze motion continuity, pixel noise, and frame composition to identify fabricated scenes.
Source: Original compilation on X