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# This Guy Posted His Ex’s "Sexy" AI Photos on Reddit For Revenge, And The Internet Is Absolutely Roasting His Balls Into Oblivion

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# This Guy Posted His Ex’s

# This Guy Posted His Ex’s "Sexy" AI Photos on Reddit For Revenge, And The Internet Is Absolutely Roasting His Balls Into Oblivion

Look, I know we’re all just out here trying to survive the eternal dumpster fire that is 2025, but some people really need to log off and touch grass before they do something permanently stupid. Enter Kenny Kott, a 34-year-old from Tampa, Florida, who decided that the best way to handle a breakup was to take his ex-girlfriend’s photos, run them through some sketchy AI “sexy” filter, and post the results on Reddit with the caption, “Guess who’s a single dad now, lmao.”

Yeah. That happened. And no, this is not a satire piece. I wish it was. But we live in a timeline where a grown-ass man thought “AI revenge porn but make it cringe” was a galaxy-brain move.

Let’s break this down, because the internet already has, and it’s beautiful.

**The Backstory: A Masterclass in Self-Owning**

According to a since-deleted post that was screenshotted by about 400 different people before it vanished, Kenny (allegedly) got dumped by his girlfriend of three years, Sarah, after she found out he’d been DMing thirst traps to an OnlyFans model named “BambiBlaze420.” Classy guy. Real catch.

Instead of doing the normal human thing—like crying into a pint of Ben & Jerry’s or posting a vague “new chapter” Instagram story—Kenny decided to weaponize AI. He took pictures Sarah had sent him during their relationship (you know, the ones you’re supposed to delete when you break up like a decent person), fed them into some bootleg “undress” app that costs $9.99 a month and probably steals your credit card info, and then posted the result to a subreddit called r/ExposedExes.

His caption? “Guess who’s a single dad now, lmao. She thought she was too good for me. Guess the internet disagrees.”

Big oof energy. But wait, it gets worse.

**The Internet Does Its Thing**

Within an hour, the post had 47 upvotes and exactly zero comments that weren’t absolute nuclear warfare on Kenny’s character. Reddit users, being the chaotic neutral gremlins they are, immediately recognized the photos as AI-generated because, let’s be real, the app made Sarah look like a character from a PS2 cutscene having a stroke. Her fingers were melting into her thigh. Her eyes were two different colors. One of the images had three nipples. THREE. NIPPLES.

User u/NotYourLawyer420 commented: “Bro really said ‘I’m gonna ruin her life’ and then posted something that looks like it was generated by a toaster running Windows 95. Get help.”

User u/Fragrant-Stress-420 chimed in: “Imagine being so pressed about getting dumped that you spend $9.99 on an app that makes your ex look like a DeepFake of a Furby. You’re not a villain, Kenny. You’re a cautionary tale.”

But the real kicker? Sarah found out. And she did what any queen with a functioning brain would do: she screenshotted everything, called her lawyer, and posted the receipts on TikTok.

**The TikTok Nuke**

Sarah, who I’m legally obligated to say is not a public figure but is now basically internet royalty, posted a 3-minute video titled “So my ex tried to ruin my life with AI porn. Anyway, here’s the police report number.”

She didn’t cry. She didn’t beg for sympathy. She just calmly explained that Kenny had violated Florida’s felony-level revenge porn laws (which, fun fact, were updated in 2024 to include AI-generated content because lawmakers knew this exact scenario was coming). She also revealed that Kenny had a child from a previous relationship, which is why his original caption mentioned being a “single dad.”

“He’s a single dad because his last girlfriend left him too,” Sarah said, sipping what looked like iced coffee. “And now he’s about to be a single dad with a criminal record. Congrats, Kenny. You played yourself.”

The video got 3.2 million views in 12 hours. Kenny’s LinkedIn was found. His employer—a car dealership called “Tampa Bay Auto World”—made a statement that was basically, “We are aware of the situation and have no further comment,” which is corporate-speak for “he’s fired, please stop emailing us.”

**The AI Revenge Porn Epidemic: It’s Real, It’s Gross, It’s Kenny**

Here’s the thing that’s not funny about this: AI revenge porn is a massive, growing problem. According to a 2024 report from the Cyber Civil Rights Initiative, over 1 in 10 Americans have been threatened with or had non-consensual intimate images created of them—AI or otherwise. And apps like the one Kenny used are basically unregulated, operating in a legal gray area that states are scrambling to close.

Florida, to its credit, already has laws on the books. Under Florida Statute 784.049, it’s a third-degree felony to distribute “sexually explicit images” of someone without their consent, with penalties including up to five years in prison. And thanks to a 2024 amendment, that now explicitly covers AI-generated images that “depict a real person in a sexual situation they did not consent to.”

So Kenny isn’t just a dickhead. He’s a dickhead who’s probably going to need a public defender.

**The Internet Jury Has Spoken**

Reddit, being Reddit, immediately did what it does best: absolutely eviscerate someone with facts and logic. User u/LegalEagleWannabe posted a breakdown of Florida’s revenge porn laws that got 12,000 upvotes. User u/DeepFakeDetective pointed out that Kenny’s AI images were so bad they could be

Final Thoughts


After reading through the coverage of Kenny Kott, I’m struck by how often the most resonant stories aren’t about polished heroes, but about people navigating the messy, unglamorous middle ground between ambition and consequence. Kott’s trajectory serves as a sobering reminder that talent alone doesn’t insulate you from the slow erosion of credibility when trust is mishandled. Ultimately, his case is a cautionary tale not just about poor decisions, but about the quiet cost of losing the very thing every public figure needs most: the benefit of the doubt.