A SoHo Sighting, Unedited. Exclusive Source, Photos Included.
The images below circulated briefly and without resistance. They were published as a routine sighting, absorbed seamlessly into an existing narrative, and treated as self explanatory.
Nothing about that process was unusual.
What followed was.
The Photos, As Seen...
Taken in SoHo, outside Cartier on Greene Street, in December, the images appear unremarkable in the way most celebrity sightings do. The framing is slightly off, the focus imperfect, and the angles suggest haste rather than intention. They read as casual, accidental, familiar.
A recognizable face, a luxury storefront, an older companion. Enough context for the viewer to assume they understand what they are seeing without asking questions.
Those two images were submitted to DeuxMoi by an exclusive source. The post went up shortly after, accompanied by a caption that treated the sighting as credible on its face.
No verification occurred. The images were not checked, the source was not vetted, and the circumstances were not interrogated. The caption’s certainty did the rest. By the time readers reached the end of the post, implication had already hardened into assumed fact.
Under normal circumstances, the story would end there.
⚠️ Spoilers below. Proceed if you're curious, not if you're comfortable.
How This Came to Us
After the sighting was submitted, but before DeuxMoi published it, we received an email from the individual who had just sent the sighting.
They contacted us deliberately. In previous posts, we were the only ones to consistently and publicly challenge DeuxMoi claims, her sourcing practices, and her habit of substituting confidence for verification. They had been watching quietly, observing how dissent was dismissed and how certainty was rewarded.
In that email, they explained how the images were created, why only two were sent, and why DeuxMoi was chosen as the test platform. The intent was not spectacle. It was observation.
They wanted to see what would happen if a submission looked right, sounded right, and fit cleanly into an already accepted narrative.
They waited to see whether the post would be questioned, verified, or slowed down.
It was published exactly as submitted.
On Our Role in This
We didn't coordinate this test. The source acted independently, submitted to DeuxMoi, then contacted us with proof of what they'd done.
We could have disclosed immediately. We didn't. That choice matters: premature disclosure would have let DeuxMoi pull the post, claim it was caught in review, and continue unchanged. The value here isn't that fake images existed, it's that they were published without verification, defended with certainty, and monetized behind a paywall.
We created nothing. We fabricated nothing. We documented a system failure in real time. But we're not neutral observers. We received evidence of active deception and chose strategic documentation over immediate intervention.
What Verification Would Have Caught
The photographs were not real.
Not in the sense of being sophisticated or technically advanced, but in the simpler and more uncomfortable sense that no one ever asked whether they were real at all.
They passed because they resembled content DeuxMoi publishes every day, because they aligned with an existing narrative, and because familiarity replaced scrutiny.
This was not a failure of technology. It was a failure of editorial process.
This is not just a question of credibility. It is a question of responsibility.
A Little Reminder for the Gospel-Readers
Yes, those pixels are convincing enough for some to treat as fact. Thankfully, not all of us are that gullible. We've been calling out Anonbelle and all her Anonbelles and Anonbeasts this week for circulating fake couple images. Guess what? Generating false images of Sebastian hanging out with his family and friends is just as ridiculous.
Yet somehow, when these land on a "credible" feed, they’re instantly accepted. Photos or no photos, facts or fiction, verification or not, confidence does all the heavy lifting. Skepticism? That’s reserved for when we actually provide proof.
Tiny takeaway: if it's on the feed, it must be true… apparently. (wink wink) if you catch my drift.
On Integrity, As Defined Elsewhere
When questioned in the past about how she determines whether a sighting is real, particularly when no photos are provided, DeuxMoi has been explicit about her standards.
In response to readers asking how credibility is assessed, she wrote:
"You're demanding information no journalist would ever disclose, then acting bewildered when you don’t get it. That’s not curiosity, that’s a fundamental misunderstanding of how reporting works. My refusal to hand over sources isn’t 'drama', it's standard practice. If that strikes you as laughable, that’s on whatever planet you’re operating from, not on my integrity."
And elsewhere:
"I appreciate the suggestion, but please don't tell me how to run my business. This sighting is 100% not baseless. I only post things that I’m confident in. Thanks!"
These statements claim professional standards. That claim carries responsibility.
Here, fabricated images were published without verification and sold behind a paywall as a real event involving a real person.
And here's where "confidence" meets consequence:
Publishing AI-generated images of a public figure behind a paywall isn't just ethically dubious, it's legally precarious. In 2023, reality star Kyland Young sued deepfake app Reface for using his likeness without permission to sell app subscriptions.
Tennessee's ELVIS Act, signed in March 2024, prohibits unauthorized commercial use of likeness and creates liability for those who distribute or publish such content, not just those who create it.
Scarlett Johansson's legal team pursued action against an AI app that created unauthorized promotional content using her likeness commercially.
The pattern is clear: unauthorized use of name, image, or likeness for commercial purposes, including paywalled content, violates state publicity laws. That fabricated nature? Doesn't shield the publisher. It aggravates the violation.
The source offered the bait, but the negligence was entirely theirs. If Sebastian Stan chose to pursue this, three elements are demonstrably present: (1) his likeness was used, (2) for commercial purposes (subscriber-exclusive content), and (3) without consent.
Congratulations, DeuxMoi. You've just created a legal case study with receipts. If Sebastian Stan were a litigious man, this post would currently be serving as Exhibit A.
Maybe you can try verifying a defense attorney next. I'm sure "trust me bro" holds up great in court. And when the papers arrive, you can always print the subpoena on a hoodie, or better yet, make the deposition a subscriber exclusive.
Confidence isn't a legal defense. Verification is. Enjoy the precedent, Melissa.
Why This Test Was Predictable
Sebastian Stan was not incidental to the outcome. His name consistently generates engagement while rarely provoking skepticism. Sightings involving him, particularly those adjacent to Annabelle Wallis, are routinely treated as self validating.
This pattern has been reinforced repeatedly through posts framed with certainty, defended aggressively in comments, and later clarified with language such as "definitely," without corroborating evidence. The lovely A.A. addressed this pattern weeks earlier in a separate post.
Within that context, a sighting did not need proof. It only needed to resemble what readers had already been trained to accept.
And it did.
How Certainty Sounds in the Wild
Before any verification occurred, before context existed, and before questions were asked, reactions across comment spaces settled almost immediately into confidence, not just in the sighting itself, but in us, because apparently skepticism only applies when we actually provide proof.
The following excerpts are reproduced verbatim.
"New blind item, with photo evidence so not very blind, of Seb at a Cartier store with his mom allegedly ring shopping. Watch them say it's untrustworthy because it’s a blind item 😭"
"Well they evidently had the chance to take a picture when he was outside. I don't get what's all this agitation and will to not believe it was a true story about this sighting."
"Good for them but i genuinely hope Annabelle doesn't see this because she deserves the surprise."
"It is reliable sometimes. This time at least there were pics so he was, in fact, outside with Georgeta."
"And the girls from Tumblr were saying that they're going to break up before 2026 skjsksjsk how do they feel now."
"👀 Paparazzi ruining possible surprise of whatever he was going to buy."
"This time ofc I believe this was 100% real."
"The more exposed information that gets out there about their motives and pretend CAA sources, the more their daily and loyal followers will stop sending anon questions. Bless Contractually Fake 😂"
"Also love how the blind about Annabelle sending in anons is being considered gospel by them even though they sent it but the DM one… 😂😬"
"They are crashing out big time. No ‘shipper’ blog is going on about that picture as much as them. Lame."
What matters here is not the mockery. Mockery is expected.
What matters is the contradiction embedded in these responses. Skepticism was reserved exclusively for the people questioning the sighting, while certainty was granted instantly to the sighting itself. The presence of images was treated as verification. The narrative assembled itself fully formed, and dissent was dismissed before it could even be articulated.
The same voices that routinely argue blind items are unreliable accepted this one without hesitation, not because it was stronger, but because it aligned. Disbelief became selective. Trust became automatic.
Familiarity did the work verification was supposed to do.
What Was Not Published
DeuxMoi received two images and nothing more.
Below are the additional original "photographs" from the same "set", shared with us by the source. Their purpose is not persuasion, but continuity. They establish authorship and demonstrate what was consciously withheld.
Two images read as incidental. A larger set suggests intent. That distinction matters in gossip spaces where credibility is performative and restraint is mistaken for authenticity.
Proof, Not a How To
We are not releasing prompts, code, or instructions, and we are not inviting replication.
What we are providing instead are materials that establish origin, timing, and sequence. These include screenshots from the source showing the original Instagram DM submission sent to DeuxMoi, captured prior to publication.
These materials confirm that the images existed, were submitted, and were published without follow up. Nothing more is required.
The Submission Itself
What ultimately matters is not how the images were made, but how effortlessly they slipped through the system once they arrived.
Two images showed up via Instagram DMs, captioned with a wink and a nod but not a shred of evidence. They were published immediately, treated as gospel, and nobody bothered to check the metadata, trace the file origins, or ask if AI had a hand in them. Those technical failsafes that usually catch fakes? Completely skipped. Instead, confidence did the heavy lifting while skepticism stayed home sipping tea.
This was not a glitch. It was the system working exactly as intended. The result was not deception through cleverness, but through absence. Absence of standards, absence of verification, absence of accountability.
The sighting did not succeed because it was convincing. It succeeded because it required nothing at all.
Unless the system changes, this will happen again. Verification. Transparent sourcing. Actual standards. Next time, we might not be the ones receiving the email first. The infrastructure remains operational, paywalled, and confident.
Confidence isn't proof. A storefront isn't a witness. A paywall doesn't transform fiction into fact.
—Contractually Fake ;)
P.S. After all this, I'm taking a nap. Holding receipts is exhausting. —I.A.
i need people to stop with this PR narrative. F/C wasn't PR from C team, and what they’re doing to H right now isn’t PR from his team either. people are lying and creating a circus around their names because chasing clicks. just ignore it and move on, because the truth always comes out sooner or later. and in this case, it’ll be sooner than yall think. // who exactly is this "they"?
look, i don't post about tarot or astrology publicly or anything, i just do them and keep them to myself, so it’s not something i’m comfortable with. but considering most tarot readers are already hinting at this, i'll just say: is deuxmoi telling the truth? no. is there someone feeding her lies about this situation that she might think she can trust? well… (and no, it’s not his pr team)
and none of this has anything to do with other things she posted about like him being in ny or the film; both of those came from fans who had proof. now, everything related to the ‘couple’ is coming from another source and she should stop listening to them because she’s just going to end up looking embarrassed for running with a bunch of lies. that’s it, i feel like i’ve already said too much lol.