The Internet vs. Coca-Cola AI ads: What happened?
Last week, Coca-Cola released an ad campaign created by generative AI, including a remake of its iconic 1995 "The Holidays are Coming" spot. The ads were crafted with help from three AI studios and large language models. Alongside the ads, the company also launched CreateRealMagic.com, which lets users create AI-driven greeting cards and browse AI-generated content. ?
This wasn’t the only case of AI-enhanced ad news this week. Both TikTok and YouTube released new AI-enhanced platform features. TikTok Announces AI Ad Updates
TikTok is making its AI ad creation tool available to all advertisers through its expanded Symphony Creative Suite. The move is designed to help brands create more effective and customizable ad campaigns.?
YouTube Also Announces?AI Ad Updates
YouTube’s latest updates to Demand Gen campaigns introduce advanced AI features to help brands boost ad targeting and creativity across its platforms.
Zooming Out:?
TikTok and YouTube’s new AI-enhanced tools are designed to make creative ad development accessible for brands of all sizes.? Coca-Cola’s use of generative AI shows that this technology isn’t just a tool for startups or emerging players—it’s firmly in the mainstream as an advertising staple. However, the backlash serves as a reminder: those wading into AI-enhanced creative territory?must tread carefully. Audiences can spot the machine behind the message. Then again, controversy often drives engagement, and in today’s attention economy, even rage-watching boosts those metrics!
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Investigating Misogyny on YouTube: Part 1
“You’re so ugly, please go get plastic surgery.”
“I hate you…itty bitty titties.”
“Why don’t you go and die, BITCH.”
These are not typical song lyrics. But these ARE the lyrics of a song constructed entirely of hateful comments received by musical YouTuber Madilyn Bailey.
Bailey is not the only YouTuber who has made a song like this. There are plenty of examples:?female creators taking the hateful comments they receive online and turning them into music. These songs, often catchy and creative, point to?a much darker reality—the relentless abuse women face on the platform.
Online harassment of women isn’t new. It’s as old as the internet itself. But YouTube stands out as one of the spaces where this hatred feels particularly rampant. For female creators, hateful trolling has become almost an expected part of the job.
Why has this become such a defining feature of being a woman on YouTube? Read more here.? ?