Claire Boucher has always embodied the internet’s complex nature, both its allure and discomfort. Have you ever mistaken a shadow in your kitchen for a cockroach? Your hand catches the light just right, casting a deceptive image in an overlooked corner. Your brain, on high alert for pests, signals danger from something unseen creeping into your space. Yet a closer glance shows everything is fine; your kitchen remains safe. Still, that uneasy feeling persists.
Grimes’ track “Artificial Angels” captures the unsettling chaos of living in an AI-infused world in 2025. Watching the song’s music video evokes that same eerie sensation. The visuals feature endless establishing shots familiar to anyone who has seen generative AI demos. The Canadian electropop artist dances amid a shifting group of Grok’s AI avatars. Cavemen appear smoking cigarettes labeled with the OpenAI logo.
Fragmented cartoon overlays simulate the overwhelming effect of videos made by obsessive creators fixated on information overload. The song opens and closes with a deliberately primitive AI voice declaring,
This is how it feels to be hunted by something smarter than you.
The song and video serve as a striking snapshot of our digital age—shocking in the moment but likely to be forgotten quickly, like spotting a dead animal on a morning walk.
Author’s summary: Grimes’ “Artificial Angels” immerses viewers in the disorienting and invasive nature of AI-driven internet culture, blending unsettling imagery with a haunting audio message.