AI Image: (Xania Monet Instagram)

Xania Monet

Who is this?

No, seriously. Who is this?

Xania Monet is an R&B newcomer now spinning on radio. She just cracked the Billboard Hot 100, and she’s sitting at No. 30 on the Mediabase R&B chart, ahead of Leon Thomas, Teyana Taylor, and Ella Mai.

There’s just one problem.

She’s not real.

No label dinner. No artist showcase. No “this is my year” post with a praying-hands emoji.

An AI-generated artist, written by Mississippi poet Telisha “Nikki” Jones, voiced by machine learning, and charted with the help of programmers from Audacy, Saga, Summit, Connoisseur, and iHeart.

The Charts Don’t Care She’s Fake

Who Is Xania Monet?

She’s not real.

But the woman behind her is.

Meet Telisha “Nikki” Jones, Mississippi-born, poetry-bred, and currently ghost-singing her way onto about 25 radio stations across America.

Telisha writes it She picks the tone. Sets the vibe. Hits go.

Sung by an R&B artist who isn’t real, who’s now playing on Phil’s “Healing, But Sexy” playlist.

Monet isn’t here to replace Jones though. She’s here because Jones couldn’t afford a studio, session singer, producer, or PR team. So she built one (necessity is the mother of something). 

The Artist Isn’t Real. The Budget Definitely Is.

Monet was signed to Hallwood Media for a reported $3 million.

Yes, million.

As in: the kind of advance human artists usually only see in Drake rumors or TikTok conspiracy threads.

And the team’s not shy about it. “We’re not replacing artists,” said manager Romel Murphy. “We’re just building a new lane.”

The Artists Who Called Cap
(My son taught me to use that word)

Kehlani posted a rant (now, deleted; but not forgotten).
SZA shared the news with a side-eye and a caption: “I don’t f*** with this either.”
Chlöe Bailey: “AI in art should be banned.”

Some called it innovation. Others called it erasure. (Not the 80’s band…but, note to other artists, allusions to Erasure would make me smile, something to consider). 

So… What Happens Now?

Somewhere between Spotify streams and lawyer bills, Xania Monet becomes a case study.

Accountants will calculate ROI on AI in all areas of music.
A&R people will evaluate digital delivery and not have to stay out late at concerts.
Record companies will get in bed with Suno and AI music production tools — the same companies that were filing cease and desists two years ago.
Broadcasters will push to lower music royalty fees
(I mean, why should I pay a robot the same as Rihanna?).

And while all that’s happening, Timbaland’s getting dragged for trying it first (same, Tim, same *ahem* Ashley). 

But while all those things are happening in the background…
listeners still liked the song.

Which means the real challenge isn’t AI. It’s us.

Will we double down on songs with presence, production, or performance?
Will we champion creators who create for something beyond the feed?
Will stations proudly say the music on KBCO is crafted by humans, for humans?
Will we disclose that AI was used when a song is playing on the rAIdo?

Or will Suno get a ton more subscribers from morning show DJs who now think they can make Song of the Week parodies as well as Jeffrey from Brooke & Jeffrey (Jeff is the O.G. and an American treasure and mastermind, btw)?

Xania Monet’s voice may be fake.
But the implications? Real.

She’s not the death of music.
She’s the mirror we need to look into.

What we choose to reflect back?
That’s on us.

“How Was I Supposed to Know?” isn’t just the name of the song, it’s the one thing your brand can’t afford to say when it comes to your stance on AI.

-Phil Becker

(This article originally appeared on Barrett Media and has been republished with permission. View the original publication here.)