A photo showing a room full of rescued dogs has been deemed so unbelievable that many online believe it is A.I. generated. The picture, shared by the British animal charity the RSPCA, features roughly 250 dirty and unkempt looking dogs crammed into a single room in what has been labeled a shocking display of animal neglect.
The picture has already been shared many times online but people are having a hard time believing it’s real. The amount of dogs in the picture, the poor conditions, and the fact that they all look rather similar has led many to incorrectly believe that this is an exaggerated depiction of animal neglect that was generated by an A.I.
To be fair, A.I. has conditioned us to be skeptical of anything that seems out of the ordinary. The image does give off a generated picture kind of vibe which doesn’t quite compute with what we’d expect to see in reality. The dogs appear somewhat calm despite their unkempt appearance, one can even be seen curled up inside an old log burner, another appears to be mid-bark, mouth agape. If you asked an A.I. to generate animal neglect it would probably spit something out similar to this.
But the RSPCA has confirmed it is not a fake image. Sadly, it is very much real, there really were 250 poodles being kept in cramped and unclean conditions.
What’s the backstory behind the picture?
According to the RSPCA the image was taken during a recent large-scale rescue which saw the huge amount of poodle-cross breed dogs rescued from a single property. A statement released by the charity explained that large numbers of animals being kept at one address can be down to a multitude of factors including mental health struggles, cost of living crisis, and breeders operating with poor practices.
The statement goes on to explain that numbers and living conditions of the dogs had rapidly grown out of control due to extenuating family circumstances.
“We understand that people are so aghast they don’t believe what they are seeing. But this photo is not AI – it’s real.” RSPCA Superintendent Jo Hirst said, “This is the staggering reality of what can happen when even well-meaning owners become overwhelmed.” Thankfully the charity intervened when it did and they were able to take in 87 of the dogs while the rest of them went to the Dogs Trust, another UK charity that advocates for the protection and care of canines.
Published: Apr 10, 2026 10:43 am