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A fading producer builds the perfect AI female vocal from a real singer's pain, but when Nia hears her voice being turned into a product, she fights to own the sound everyone is trying to copy.
SYNOPSIS:
SOUND LIKE ME opens with a woman insisting she does not have to sing pretty; she just has to sound like herself. That voice belongs to Nia. In the studio, producer JMack plays a flawless AI female hook labeled BRIDE_V7_PROTO for a young rapper who would rather use the synthetic reference than try to match real emotion. The track is clean, scalable, and bloodless. To the industry, that makes it useful.
Nia's life outside the booth is harder, messier, and more valuable than the model built from her. She counts short cash, protects her image, and tries to survive rooms where men want pieces of her sound, face, and story. JMack sees the commercial future in AI vocals, but the more the system copies Nia, the more it exposes what it cannot generate: ownership, consent, and lived pain. The film follows the collision between music ambition and synthetic identity as Nia fights to keep her voice from becoming someone else's product.