Despite billions in hype and valuations, generative AI ads fell flat on football’s biggest stage
Super Bowl 60 was supposed to be generative AI’s moment. At least eight major advertisers brought AI to the field from OpenAI and Anthropic selling the technology directly to consumers, to vodka maker Svedka using AI to create its entire commercial. It was the Super Bowl debut for several AI giants trying to convince millions of viewers that artificial intelligence is inevitable, helpful, and ready to integrate seamlessly into everyday life. Instead, what unfolded was a messaging disaster that exposed a uncomfortable truth: after four years of hype, billion-dollar valuations, and rapid mainstream adoption, companies still have no idea how to talk about what they actually do.
The problem isn’t that brands weren’t trying. Nearly every AI advertiser promised smarter tools, more human interactions, and productivity gains. They positioned themselves as essential infrastructure for modern life. But when you line up the commercials side by side, the pitches blur together into a vague soup of aspirational language that could describe literally any software company from the past decade. “The commercials are similar to how AI was portrayed last year practical use cases for AI or humanizing in people’s daily lives,” said Debra Aho Williamson, founder and chief analyst at Sonata Insights.
The math doesn’t work anymore.
Nearly 30% of internet users will use ChatGPT by the end of 2026, with growth expected to reach 35% by 2029. That sounds impressive until you realize it reveals the actual ceiling. Even with ChatGPT’s dominance, two-thirds of internet users still aren’t using it. Meanwhile, companies are burning through investor cash expecting exponential growth. OpenAI alone is chasing a valuation north of $800 billion. The pressure is crushing. “AI players are trying to get better awareness for their offerings,” said Jeremy Goldman, senior director at Emarketer. “Their only chance is brand differentiation.”
The irony? AI companies are converging on nearly identical products targeting nearly identical audiences. ChatGPT started as a broad consumer platform while Claude positioned itself as a tool for coders. Now they’re both promising productivity and coding efficiency. Everyone’s selling the same thing to everyone. That overlap showed up painfully in Anthropic’s Super Bowl debut.
Anthropic’s bet backfired spectacularly
The company decided its big message would be that Claude doesn’t include ads directly contrasting itself with OpenAI’s announcement that it would test ads in ChatGPT. It was a strategic gamble that Claude’s ad-free principles would resonate more than product familiarity. Except there’s a massive awareness gap: 73% of consumers reported using ChatGPT according to an S&P Global survey, while Claude registered at just 7%. Most people don’t even know what Claude is. How do you differentiate on principles when your audience has never heard of you?
The response was brutal. An iSpot survey of 500 Super Bowl viewers placed Claude’s ad in the bottom 3% for likeability compared to Super Bowl ads over five years. Its purchase intent scored 24% below Super Bowl norms. Viewers kept using the same word to describe their reaction: “WTF.” Confusion. That’s the brand experience Anthropic paid millions to deliver.
Meta’s smart glasses collaboration with Oakley
showed more promise by actually demonstrating AI solving a tangible problem enhancing athletic performance through technology. But even that missed the mark on memorability. The execution was straightforward, lacking the creative twist that elevates impressive into iconic.
Then there was Svedka, which became the category’s cautionary tale. The vodka brand resurrected its 2005 fembot using AI to create the ad itself. Viewers called it “weird” and “surreal.” The brand match registered at just 7% compared to a 63% norm for alcoholic beverage ads. The problem wasn’t AI; it was strategy. “Using AI to make the ad is not the idea,” said Ben Williams, global chief creative officer at DEPT. “AI as the tool became the headline, resulting in a message that feels hollow rather than distinctive.”
That’s where AI advertising stands after four years of buildup: messaging confusion, product sameness, and audiences wondering why any of this matters.

