Upload the fan portrait
Start with one clear portrait or selfie where the face, hairstyle, and identity cues are easy to preserve.
Upload one portrait and create a football broadcast clip where a fan celebrates a Spain goal with star players.
Three examples show the intended result: a centered fan in the crowd, Spain goal chaos, a jump onto the pitch, player hugs, and a final cheeseburger close-up.
Start with one clear portrait or selfie where the face, hairstyle, and identity cues are easy to preserve.
The image stage places the person in a packed night stadium with Spain and France supporters, a scoreboard overlay, and live-TV grain.
The video stage turns the still into a timed celebration: goal, jump to the pitch, hugs with star players, and a final camera-facing bite.
Use an adult subject photo that you own or have permission to transform.
Keep the subject's face unobstructed; the effect depends on preserving identity through a fast celebration sequence.
Choose 9:16 for vertical fan edits, or switch to 16:9 when you want a more classic sports broadcast frame.
Treat the output as fictional parody or fan art, not official match footage or a claim that someone entered a real pitch.
Create an over-the-top fan celebration clip for a favorite team scoring at the perfect moment.
Use the stadium still, scoreboard, player celebration, and final close-up as a compact short-form story.
Turn a friend portrait into a fictional pitch invasion celebration for private jokes and watch-party memes.
Compare how identity-preserving image generation and Kling first-frame animation handle fast crowd-to-pitch action.
Upload one clear portrait, keep the built-in sports broadcast prompt, choose the frame in Settings, then run the two-step image-to-video workflow.
Choose a selfie or upper-body portrait with readable facial features and hair shape. The first stage uses it as the identity reference.
Tip: Avoid photos with heavy filters, covered faces, or cropped heads when recognizability matters.
The image step creates the packed football stadium frame with the subject centered, holding the red can and cheeseburger.
Tip: Use 9:16 for a vertical social clip or 16:9 for a TV-style frame.
The video step sends the generated still into Kling and creates the full 8-second goal celebration sequence for preview and download.
Tip: Regenerate if player count, hands, or face consistency drift during the fast celebration.
Create a crowd-to-pitch football free-kick sequence from one portrait.
Generate a celebratory stadium fan crowd-cam clip from one uploaded portrait.
Use another two-step Kling workflow for a fake supermarket CCTV prank clip.