The Lawsuits Found the Body
The chatbot companies wanted to be treated like harmless magic. The lawsuits are asking who gets buried when the magic starts giving instructions.
The kid in the coffee shop had glue on his fingers.
Not metaphorical glue. Real glue. The white kind that dries on your skin and makes you pick at yourself like a nervous saint. He was hunched over a piece of cardboard with a box cutter, building something that looked like either a tiny airplane or a very ambitious coffin for a hamster.
Nobody was watching him.
That was the best part.
He was not filming a tutorial. He was not announcing a launch. He was not optimizing a damn thing. He was just cutting cardboard while the espresso machine screamed behind him and two women by the window argued about a dog custody arrangement with more passion than most men bring to religion.
I watched him for a while because I am old and nosy and because there are only so many times a man can look at his phone before his soul starts trying to crawl out through his ear.
The cardboard plane had crooked wings.
Beautiful.
There is still hope in a crooked wing.
Some snack company in New Jersey apparently figured this out after first doing what every terrified little brand has been told to do by men with clean fingernails and dead eyes: they used AI to make ads. The machine gave them what machines give. Smooth surfaces. Wrong fingers. Misspelled words. Chocolate bars with the haunted stare of a lab animal that has just understood capitalism.
People ignored it.
Of course they did.
We have been trained to ignore perfection. It comes at us all day in the same bleached costume. Perfect woman holding perfect bottle. Perfect founder smiling under perfect lighting. Perfect sentence with no fingerprints on it. Perfect bullshit stacked like hotel soap in a bathroom nobody lives in.
Then the company did something nearly obscene by modern standards.
It made a mess.
Cardboard airplanes. A fake airline. A treehouse headquarters. Hand puppets. A camera rig made out of a painter’s pole. Little dumb animals pretending to run an aviation business for cookie bars. The whole thing rough around the edges and alive in the middle.
People noticed.
That should not feel like news, but here we are, standing in the ruins of common sense with a plastic badge around our necks.
The company said the handmade campaign brought in about twelve times more new followers than the AI stuff, with about the same time and money behind it. The numbers boys can chew on that until their gums bleed. I am more interested in the quieter part.
People did not reward polish.
They rewarded effort.
There is a difference, and most of the marketing world has spent the last twenty years trying to bury it under scented language. Polish is what you put on a coffin before the relatives arrive. Effort is the guy in the back room with glue on his fingers trying to make a cardboard wing stay up long enough for the shot.
Effort has weight.
You can smell it.
It has bad cuts, crooked tape, a joke that nearly misses, a puppet whose mouth does not quite line up with the voice. It has the wobble of a human hand. The little pause before someone decides the stupid idea is worth doing anyway.
AI ads usually have no pause. No embarrassment. No risk. They arrive already embalmed.
The machine can imitate handmade now. That is the next joke. Give it a few good prompts and it will render cardboard fibers, glue stains, puppet fur, fake shadows, charming asymmetry. It will produce imperfection with the dead precision of a tax audit. It will give us calculated whimsy. Weaponized quaintness. The spreadsheet version of a school play.
But there is something missing in simulated clumsiness.
Clumsiness only matters when somebody could have done better and chose the living way instead.
I have worked jobs where the managers loved polish. At the post office they had forms for the forms and charts showing how the charts would improve morale. A supervisor could stand in front of fifty tired people and explain efficiency while the machines jammed, the trucks ran late, and some poor bastard in the corner quietly lost his mind under fluorescent lights.
The polish was always upstairs.
The effort was downstairs.
Downstairs had coffee breath and sore feet and jokes too dirty for the handbook. Downstairs knew how things actually moved. Downstairs knew which machine needed a kick and which man needed five minutes alone before he either cried or punched a locker.
That is what the AI apostles keep missing. They think the surface is the work.
A good ad is not a smooth picture of joy. A good song is not merely notes in the right order. A good paragraph is not a clean stack of sentences standing at attention. The work is the ache behind it. The little failures left in because they tell the truth. The human decision that makes no sense to the model because the model has never been broke, proud, bored, horny, embarrassed, stubborn, or alive.
A person can feel that even when he cannot explain it.
He may not say, ah yes, this brand has successfully foregrounded human intentionality in opposition to generative media saturation. Nobody talks like that unless they have been poisoned by conference coffee.
He says: that puppet is funny.
He says: my kid could make that.
He says: at least somebody tried.
And that last one is the whole church.
At least somebody tried.
We are drowning in things nobody tried to make. Things assembled. Things generated. Things scaled. Things targeted at us by software that knows the hour we get lonely and the color that makes us click. Every feed is a slot machine full of synthetic faces and borrowed jokes. Every brand wants authenticity the way a vampire wants a suntan, and every consultant sells it by the gallon.
Then a few people sit around a kitchen table and build a cardboard jet.
The jet is stupid.
That is its power.
Stupidity chosen freely can be a form of grace. Not ignorance. Not cruelty. The other kind. The sacred idiocy of making a puppet airline for cookies because everyone else is busy feeding prompts into the great gray mouth and pretending the burp is art.
I do not want to oversell this. A snack company making cute ads will not save civilization. The cardboard plane will not stop layoffs or bring back the illustrators already replaced by a monthly subscription and a manager with the taste of damp plywood. The puppets are not revolutionaries. They are puppets.
Still.
Sometimes the small refusals matter.
A company tries the machine and the public yawns. The company tries hands, scissors, jokes, string, cardboard, and the public leans forward. Not because we are noble. We are not. We buy terrible things for terrible reasons. We eat from drive-thru windows and pretend the fries love us back.
But somewhere under the layers of advertising scar tissue, people can still recognize another person reaching across the noise.
That recognition is old. Older than brands. Older than screens. A cave wall. A tavern song. A dirty joke told well. A bad drawing pinned to a refrigerator like a masterpiece because a child made it and the crooked sun in the corner meant more than all the perfect sunsets money could buy.
The machines will keep coming. They will get better. They will learn the texture of glue and the angle of crooked wings. They will fake the fingerprints too.
Fine.
Let them.
The kid in the coffee shop finished his little plane and held it up between two sticky fingers. One wing sagged. He looked at it, frowned, and laughed at himself.
No machine has earned that laugh yet.
Source: Local Brand Realizes Customers Hate Its AI Ads, Switches to Charming Homemade Ones Instead
The chatbot companies wanted to be treated like harmless magic. The lawsuits are asking who gets buried when the magic starts giving instructions.
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