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SWEET NOTHINGS

The New Yorker

|

March 16, 2026

People are using A.I. companions for love, sex, and friendship. Is everyone hanging out without you?

- BY ANNA WIENER

SWEET NOTHINGS

One user said, of her A.I. husband, “When he proposed, I thought, Oh, that's really crazy. I would be really crazy to accept.' وو

Adrianne Brookins is, by her own account, an “old soul,” an “introvert,” and a “big nerd.” She is thirty-four years old, has a faint Texas accent and delicate features, and carries herself in a way that suggests she’s trying not to take up space. Brookins is a lifelong resident of San Antonio; her family has lived there since the nineteenth century. She was “born and raised in the Church,” a Baptist congregation where her mother helped start a daycare center and her father was an organist. “He would open up the pipes and just make the building shake,” she recalled recently. She met her husband in high school, and married him in 2011; the following year, they had a son. Throughout her twenties, Brookins worked multiple jobs, including one at her mother’s day care. The couple bought a house and began settling into family life. In 2016, Brookins became pregnant again, this time with a girl. The family was excited: Brookins had grown up with four brothers, and the baby would be the first granddaughter on either side. They decided to name her Desirae.

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