AI & Machine Learning
Business Insiderabout 3 hours ago
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I travel for work a lot and my son missed our bedtime stories. I built an AI version of my voice for him.

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A father built an AI storyteller that clones his voice so his son can hear bedtime stories while he travels for work.

I travel for work a lot and my son missed our bedtime stories. I built an AI version of my voice for him.

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The Big Picture
Max Fricke, founder of HuggleTales, created an AI app that replicates his voice to tell his 3-year-old son personalized stories. The idea came during a monthlong work trip when poor WiFi made it hard to connect via video calls. Fricke spent hundreds of hours training AI models to clone his voice, eventually achieving a 90% accurate replication. His son uses the app both when Fricke is away and sometimes together at home as a shared activity. The app builds on the child's existing use of a Toniebox, which already allowed recorded voice playback. Fricke emphasizes the tool supplements rather than replaces real-time communication like phone calls or FaceTime.
Why It Matters
This story highlights a growing trend of parents using AI to maintain emotional bonds with children during physical separation. While voice cloning raises ethical questions about authenticity and consent, it also demonstrates how generative AI can be repurposed for deeply personal, non-commercial needs. As remote work and frequent travel persist, such tools may become more common, blurring the line between human connection and AI-mediated interaction.

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dad and child
dad and child
Max Fricke cloned his voice with AI so his son would miss him less while traveling.

Courtesy of Max Fricke

  • Max Fricke was on a monthlong work trip when he had the idea for an AI storyteller.
  • He spent hundreds of hours training AI to replicate his voice.
  • His 3-year-old enjoys using the AI when they're together or apart.

This as-told-to essay is based on a conversation with Max Fricke, founder of HuggleTales. It has been edited for length and clarity.

My 3-year-old son loves listening to stories I've made up for him. So when I travel, which I do frequently for work, we both miss out on our bedtime routine of creating stories.

I was on a monthlong trip when I had an idea: what if I could create an AI that could replicate my voice and tell my son the stories he loved so much?

I'm creative, but like many parents, I am also tired. On that trip, I was frustrated: my Wifi connection wasn't great, and my stories just weren't resonating with my son the way they usually did, so I had started using AI to generate story ideas. It was fun, and I was able to create stories that helped my son process his day. I realized there was a lot of potential there.

My son was already used to listening to audio stories

My son already enjoyed using the Toniebox, a child-focused speaker. The speaker allows kids to place a figurine on top of the box, and the selected figurine tells a specific story. My son really liked having the autonomy to choose what story he listened to.

Our Toniebox let me record my voice for our son, so he could choose to play that particular story. This tool allowed my son to hear my voice while I wasn't available, but it didn't allow us to create the fluid, engaging stories he was used to hearing at bedtime.

I envisioned a product that would allow him to ask for a story, say about butterflies and dragons. Then, he could hear the story immediately, in my voice, even when I wasn't available.

I vibe-coded an app, and spent hours replicating my voice

I'm not a coder, but I downloaded Basecamp, which let me vibe-code an AI product. I experimented with creating prompts that produced more creative stories with ChatGPT and Gemini.

Cloning my voice was the hardest part. Even that term — cloning — sounds creepy to lots of people. When my son first heard my AI-generated voice, he was skeptical because it didn't sound exactly like me. But as I refined the model, he didn't notice the difference between my voice recordings and the AI-produced voice.

Today, the voice sounds exactly like me, 90% of the time. That's enough for my son to enjoy listening to it almost as much as he enjoys hearing my stories in person.

My son benefits the most from the AI storytelling

I don't want HuggleTales — the app that I've developed — to replace the emotional connection of a phone call or FaceTime. I still tell my son stories over the phone or in person. However, now we have another tool: when he wants to hear my voice, he can use the app.

It's also helpful when I'm tired. We've all struggled to come up with a story at the end of a long day. Sometimes, my son and I will give the app a prompt, and lie together to listen to a story told in my voice. That might be odd to some, but for me it's just another way to connect with my son.

Ultimately, all the work I've put into this app is for my son. He's the one who benefits. When I'm at work, I still miss him, but now he can get an emotional hug from me, even when I'm not around.

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I travel for work a lot and my son missed our bedtime stories. I built an AI version of my voice for him. | TechCulture