Steven Jarvis Does AI Generated Art
He's a weird one.
This is Steven Jarvis.
SSJ. That’s him. Steven Scott Jarvis. He has a penchant for using initials, much like he did with his banned KJTfromTX account, which uses his wife’s initials. How can we be sure that this is Steven?
This google result brings up a cached page. The one on the left is the cached page archived by google, the one on the right is the page as it is now.
Furthermore, you can click on the cached version named “Steven Jarvis” and it will take you to the profile of the live account for “SSJ”. This was indexed 20 days ago when the account was still named Steven Jarvis. What could have happened since then that might have spooked Steven into locking down this account and changing his name? Maybe being outed for his bizarre predilections made him nervous and he thought that people would get the wrong idea. It’s understandable given the content.
If you are interested in looking at his entire account, it’s here. There’s some weird stuff on there, but nothing illegal. It looks like he has an obsession with redheads, which does answer some lingering questions about why he is so hung up on a few of his harassment victims.
1,600 + images created at the time of this post and only 124 published. The rest of them are private, only accessible to Jarvis. Or so he thinks. One of the images he created with this account was used for the banned @SereneVisage Twitter account, but don’t tell him I figured him out.
It isn’t so much that Steven Jarvis does AI-generated art, because I happen to think AI-generated art is cool as fuck. It isn’t even the images that he’s allowed people to see on his timeline that are all that bad, after all these programs have safeguards that make it hard for people to break the rules. Hard, but not impossible.
Below is an example of one of the images Jarvis requested the computer make for him. You will see his screen name, SSJ, and his username, Enthused. Then you will see when each image was made. Next, in bold, is the name of the image. Going down the text you will come to a portion that says “Text Prompts”. This is important because it is the actual textual instruction that Jarvis fed to the computer to get the resulting image.
What was the request for this image?
“exquisite school uniforms worn by long haired girls”
How about this one?
“girl school uniform”
And this one?
“girl body made of roses, green skin” Steven Jarvis asked the computer to show him a girl body. When Steven Jarvis wants to see a woman, he asks the computer for a woman. Sometimes he asks for a young woman. Sometimes a princess.
As here. The image just before the last. He asked for a woman to be shown to him, not a girl. Jarvis asked for a girl directly after this image of a woman in a tight fitting dress. I would say it warrants further scrutiny. Questions need to be asked, at the very least. I’m a not saying that there is something wrong with the images that the computer provided to his prompts, but the prompts he is using to get the images are curious.
This one is from the same day. I don’t even know what “pucker swallow” means. Can Jarvis explain? I know what it sounds like to me. It sounds like he was asking the computer for suggestive posing.
Here he requested an image of an anime-style girl and boy holding hands. Why does this seem familiar?
That’s right. Steven Jarvis has tried this before. He must have found a workaround to asking an erotic anime artist and thought he would try his hand at asking the computer to create it for him.
There’s a lot more to look through if you are interested. I didn’t even want to draw attention to the really fucked up stuff, and there’s, even more, that isn’t publicly available. What kind of shit is he hiding in that account if this is the stuff he would publish?











There are SO MANY that are ‘hyper detailed young <girl/anime> in skimpy clothes’. 🤮 dude is disgusting.