In 1981, Sherwin Rosen described “The Economics of Superstars” and detailed why a tiny fraction of people capture a massive share of rewards in any field where talent differences are small but perceived as significant.
In 1981, Sherwin Rosen described “The Economics of Superstars” and detailed why a tiny fraction of people capture a massive share of rewards in any field where talent differences are small but perceived as significant. But as AI absorbs most white-and blue-collar work, the superstar economy doesn’t merely persist, it compounds. When accountants, coders, lawyers, and logistics managers disappear from the labor market, human attention doesn’t disappear with them.
It compresses. With fewer domains where human performance still matters, the remaining arenas absorb an overwhelming share of money, attention, status, and desire. The market for genuine irreplaceable human presence shrinks to a handful of fields, and the rewards pour into whoever sits at the top of those fields with increased intensity. Those people are the body economy aristocrats. Here are the 10 professions that will produce them.
The gladiator economy has survived every technological disruption for 2,000 years. It will likely thrive after an AI-driven economic shift because live competition, real physical risk, and unscripted outcomes remain uniquely compelling, perhaps even more so in a world where most things are done by robots. Taylor Swift’s Eras tour pulled $2 billion, and that number looks modest when digital music is entirely commoditized and the live room is the only thing left worth paying for.
Sweat, imperfection, crowd energy, 3 seconds of eye contact with someone in row 12. No algorithm delivers that. Sex will increasingly be automated and outsourced to artificial intelligence and robotics. Yet the cam-girl and OnlyFans economy that preceded it will likely become one of the most expensive luxury goods on earth. Top earners in this category already privately clear $400,000 to $1 million annually.
By 2040, the 50 to 100 people at the absolute pinnacle could be pulling $400 million or more from ultra-wealthy clients who have everything except the one thing machines cannot provide: genuine biological-to-biological intimacy. AI can copy Gisele Bündchen’s likeness and license any model’s face for a campaign, but being a biological it-girl will carry a cachet that brands pay a massive premium for.
Digital can replicate the image. It can’t replicate the aura of the most beautiful people on earth, with the best vibes, physically advocating on your brand’s behalf. AI probably writes better average jokes than 80% of working comics by the end of 2026. But it can’t, and will likely always lag behind, in understanding the sharp edges of lived experience that make jokes deeply funny. That’s a bodily thing.
The best stand-up comes from someone who has been churned through decades of humiliation, bad relationships, and late-night rooms full of people who didn’t laugh, and somehow metabolized all of it into 60 minutes that makes a stranger cry from laughing. No context window gets there. The top 50 comics in the world will do fewer dates, charge more, and be treated like the gladiators they are. CGI will hollow out most film and TV acting within a decade because why hire a human when you can generate a photorealistic performance and own the IP outright.
The stage is the last fortress. Broadway and West End become anti-AI prestige entertainment, the same way vinyl became a luxury object after digital killed it commercially (and with it, a likely resurgence in premiums charged for vintage human-made film, screened and celebrated precisely because humans made it). AI writes better recipes than any human chef already. But a 20-course tasting menu with the chef present, adjusting in real time, turning dinner into 4 hours of theater for 12 people at $3,000 a seat is a different product entirely.
Private dinners with the 20 chefs who matter in 2040 will be impossible to book and absurd to price. These belong together because the product is identical: a human body doing something that looks impossible in front of you, with real consequences if it goes wrong. The gasp when a magician breaks your sense of reality 4 feet away is the same neurological event as watching an aerialist catch a trapeze bar 40 feet off the ground, or a ballet principal do something with their body that 20 years of training barely made possible.
AI can generate flawless versions of all of it on a screen. That’s precisely why the certified-live version becomes the premium. Billionaires will pay extraordinary sums for a real human whose entire attention is on them, in the room, right now. Elite personal trainers already clear $1–5 million annually from A-list clients because there’s no app that replaces someone who physically won’t let you quit.
But the category is bigger than fitness: elite coaches, private tutors, high-end nannies, personal concierges, bespoke experience artists. Marina Abramović sat silently across from strangers at MoMA and people queued for hours crying, The product across all of it is identical: one warm, focused, irreplaceable human being, present, for you with a specific skill is priceless. Permanent. Intimate. Real pain, real transformation, a real human deciding in real time how to respond to your body.
In a world where everything is infinitely reproducible, something permanent and unique on your skin by someone whose work is verifiably human becomes a different category of status object entirely. Seven-figure sessions are coming. From the beginning of time there has always been a higher echelon of body economy aristocrats who dominate markets and public attention. What is new is the context. The near-total obliteration of white collar knowledge work and the accelerating vanishing of blue collar labor means human eyes will fixate ever more intensely on the few who can still generate value from their pure biological configuration and aura.
Perhaps one day even verified as such by a government database distinguishing certified human performers from AI-generated simulacra, and paid a premium precisely because of that verification. Will they be paid in money? Will knowledge workers disappear entirely? Probably not entirely. A ruling class of human cognitive workers will likely persist in some form. But whether cash means anything by then is a whole other question.
What seems clear is that the people on this list will have access to resources, status, and power well beyond whatever universal basic income the rest of the population is surviving on. January Nelson is a writer, editor, and dreamer. She writes about astrology, games, love, relationships, and entertainment. January graduated with an English and Literature degree from Columbia University.
Summary
This report covers the latest developments in artificial intelligence. The information presented highlights key changes and updates that are relevant to those following this topic.
Original Source: Thoughtcatalog.com | Author: January Nelson | Published: March 8, 2026, 10:25 pm


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