- AI-generated retirement ad draws criticism despite real product behind it
- STRC offers high yield but carries clear and significant risks
- Real investors are using it, even as debate focuses on marketing tactics
The woman in Strategy’s viral retirement ad isn’t real, and that much is obvious once you look closely. Coffeezilla called it out quickly, pointing to the AI-generated visuals and the way the video frames a complex financial product like it’s some kind of easy, low-risk income stream, which, to be fair, is a valid concern.

But the conversation didn’t stop there, and maybe it should have gone a bit deeper than just whether the face on the screen was real or not.
What STRC Actually Is
STRC isn’t a savings account, and it’s definitely not something backed by guarantees or insurance, even if the ad sort of leans in that direction. It’s a preferred stock, offering around 11.5% annual yield paid monthly, which naturally grabs attention, especially in a market where safe returns are much lower.
At the same time, it carries a B- credit rating, which sits firmly in junk territory, and the board can suspend dividends whenever it wants. The price has already dipped below $100 before, touching around $90, so the risks aren’t hidden, they’re just not the part people focus on first.
The Marketing Problem vs The Product Itself
Coffeezilla’s comparison to Terra’s Anchor protocol adds another layer to the criticism, and it’s not an unfair one given how that situation ended. High yields always raise eyebrows, and when paired with simplified messaging, it can start to feel misleading, even if the disclosures are technically there.

That’s really where the tension sits, between clear risk disclosures in fine print and the polished, almost dream-like presentation in the ad. Whether that balance is acceptable or not is still up for debate, and probably will be for a while.
The Reality Behind the Narrative
What gets lost in all of this, though, is that the core idea behind the ad isn’t entirely fictional. There are real retirees using STRC and STRK as part of their income strategies, not because they were tricked by an AI video, but because they evaluated the risk and decided it worked for them.
That’s a more complicated conversation, and maybe a more important one too. Instead of focusing only on how the product is marketed, the bigger question is whether people actually understand what they’re buying, and whether they’re okay with the trade-offs that come with it.











