To bring Digital Ozzy to life, Hyperreal, a content studio that specializes in photorealistic characters and AI-driven interactive entertainment, will use authenticated source material — or “digital DNA” as it calls it. That’s what it did to resurrect legendary Marvel artist Stan Lee for Los Angeles Comic-Con last year.

“Nothing is scraped from the internet, nothing is approximated and nothing is generated from data that wasn’t specifically and willingly given,” Remington Scott, CEO of Hyperreal, said in an interview. “The result operates in real time. This isn’t a pre-recorded video playing on a loop. It’s a living performance that can listen, respond and interact naturally.”

How Are Fans Reacting?

This won’t be the first time since Ozzy Osbourne died that he’ll be resurrected with artificial intelligence. Last year, Rod Stewart paid tribute to the rocker with an AI-generated video that showed him snapping selfies in heaven with dead celebrities including Kurt Cobain, Michael Jackson, Bob Marley and Freddie Mercury. The segment sparked backlash, with some viewers criticizing it as “creepy and tasteless.”

The announcement of the upcoming Ozzy avatar has been met both with excitement and skepticism. “Let the man rest,” Joshua Hayes wrote in an X thread about the news. That was one of the more subdued negative responses, many of which focus around respecting the dead.

The broader question of how audiences ultimately respond to AI representations of deceased artists will be answered over time by the quality and integrity of what gets built, Scott of Hyperreal maintains. He said it’s a healthy conversation for the industry.

“We also believe that fans are smarter and more discerning than they’re sometimes given credit for,” he added. “When they experience something that genuinely captures the connection they felt with an artist, they recognize it. Jack Osbourne called the accuracy of this technology ‘scary.’ That reaction isn’t unease about artificiality, it’s recognition of something real.”