Forget AI replacing human artists—The Devil Wears Prada 2 just proved that human artists can replace AI.
The new movie, a long-awaited sequel to 2006’s The Devil Wears Prada, sees the return of star Meryl Streep as iconic fashion editor Miranda Priestly. It begins with Priestly in a PR crisis, sparking a slew of online hate. That includes memes like an image of Priestly dressed as a fast-food worker captioned, “Would you like lies with that?”
The image is only briefly on screen, and at first glance, many moviegoers assumed it was AI-generated. After all, on the internet of 2026, it most likely would be—an internet troll likely isn’t going out of their way to craft the image by hand.
But after The Devil Wears Prada 2 hit theaters on May 1, digital artist Alexis Franklin took to social media to set the record straight: She’s the one who created the artwork, not AI, at the request of director David Frankel.
On Instagram, Franklin posted the artwork along with a timelapse of her digital painting process. “Absolutely no disrespect to Queen Meryl, but this is something I would’ve painted in my free time, so when they asked me to do this it was nothing but fun,” she wrote in the caption.
Franklin also shared her art on X, writing that her Instagram post had been “flooded with comments of relief that this gag in The Devil Wears Prada 2 was created by an actual human (me), so I figured I’d also post it here because I think these companies should get their flowers when they hire an artist.”
The story behind Franklin’s artwork quickly went viral, with her X post amassing 3.7 million views. Many users praised the Devil Wears Prada 2 team for staying true to the pro-artistry message of their film and hiring a human artist, even when using an AI-generated image would have made sense for the plot.
