Quip’s latest ad wasn’t AI-generated. People were convinced it was

Quip's human-made ad was mistaken for AI-generated content, prompting the brand to release behind-the-scenes footage to prove authenticity. 50% of consumers prefer brands that don't use generative AI in advertising according to Gartner survey.
Consumer AI skepticism creates opportunity for brands to differentiate through authentic creative processes and transparent production methods. Sellers should proactively communicate human-made content to capture the 50% of consumers who prefer non-AI brands.
As AI content floods marketplaces, human authenticity becomes a competitive advantage that sellers can leverage for brand positioning and customer loyalty.
Add 'Human-made' or 'No AI' labels to creative content in product listings and social media to appeal to AI-skeptical consumers.
Document your creative process with behind-the-scenes content to build authenticity and differentiate from AI-generated competitors.
Bottom Line
Consumer AI backlash creates differentiation opportunity for authentic brands.
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Industry Context
Useful background context, but lower-priority than direct platform, community, or operator intelligence.
Impact Level
medium
Consumer AI backlash creates differentiation opportunity for authentic brands.
Key Stat / Trigger
50% of consumers prefer brands that don't use generative AI in advertising
Focus on the operational implication, not just the headline.
Full Coverage
CPG Playbook // April 28, 2026 Quip’s latest ad wasn’t AI-generated. People were convinced it was By Allison Smith Yalan Wen When oral health company Quip rolled out a whimsical, surrealist ad for its electric toothbrush in March, some users online came to a quick conclusion: It must have been made with AI.
“The first thing that came was, ‘This is AI,’ or, ‘Why are you using AI?’” said Quip CEO Meredith Glansberg, describing some of the comments the ad received on social media. In reality, the spot was entirely AI-free.
The 15-second ad features a human figure with a mouth for a head lounging in a spa on a shell-shaped daybed, clutching a comically oversized toothbrush. It was the ad’s deliberately hyper-stylized visuals that led some viewers to assume it had been generated by AI.
But the spot had actually relied on practical effects, including a physical set, a human model and miniatures. The response prompted Quip to publish a behind-the-scenes post on its blog. The company had already planned to release the footage but moved up the timeline by a month after seeing the comments.
When Quip shared the behind-the-scenes footage on Instagram, the company captioned the post, “No AI, just us.” The goal wasn’t to prove critics wrong so much as to highlight Quip’s creative process. “We’re really proud of the concept. We’re really proud of how it came to life,” Glansberg said. “Let’s highlight what we did do versus what we didn’t do.”
Quip’s blog post walks through the campaign’s production in detail, showing how the surreal visuals were achieved using practical techniques rather than AI. The team built miniature sets to create exaggerated environments, cast an actor to wear a custom-made mouth headpiece and filmed scenes on a blue screen before compositing them together.
The final ad layered these elements into a cohesive, dreamlike world. The skepticism wasn’t coming out of nowhere. There’s no definite way to know how much AI slop — low-quality, mass-produced content generated with artificial intelligence — proliferates online, but it has undeniably inundated most corners of the internet.
Most major social media platforms now require disclosure of artificial intelligence use, but those safeguards are inconsistently applied and easy to circumvent. “Platforms like Instagram will do good work identifying AI content, but they’ll get worse at it over time as AI gets better,” Instagram CEO Adam Mosseri wrote in a December message.
“We need to build the best creative tools. Label AI-generated content and verify authentic content.” At the same time, brands are facing mounting criticism for their use of generative AI in advertising, particularly when that use isn’t clearly disclosed. Last year, J.
Crew drew backlash after the Blackbird Spyplane newsletter flagged apparent AI hallucinations in an Instagram ad. The brand initially did not disclose the use of AI, but later updated the credit to “Sam Finn Studio,” an AI design studio, following social media scrutiny.
Other brands that have faced consumer backlash for embracing AI in advertising include Coca-Cola, Levi Strauss and McDonald’s. Sixty-eight percent of U. S. consumers frequently wonder whether the content they see is real, according to a survey by advisory firm Gartner.
And half would prefer give their business to brands that don’t use generative AI in consumer-facing messages, such as advertising. According to Kate Muhl, a VP analyst at Gartner specializing in cultural and consumer insights, consumer frustration is rooted in deeper fears about AI replacing workers and rapidly transforming the economy.
“Those feelings get crystallized into anger at brands, because that’s a place where people actually feel like they have some voice,” she said. “There’s something they can do — they can say, ‘I’m not going to use this brand,’ or they can call the brand out online. It’s one of the few places where people feel like they still have some power.”
This plays out most clearly in marketing, which Muhl described as the “front line” of how consumers interact with companies. In response, some brands are adopting explicit “no AI” positions. Intimate apparel brand Aerie, for example, pledged in October that it would never use AI-generated bodies or people in marketing.
The company reiterated that promise in a new ad featuring Pamela Anderson that rolled out a month ago. The move built upon the company’s long-standing 2014 commitment to stop retouching models. Other companies, like Apple, have taken a similar approach to Quip, showcasing the human craft and labor behind their marketing efforts.
For instance, in December, Apple released a holiday ad that featured a cast of woodland puppets caroling in a snow-covered forest. Apple paired the ad’s release with a behind-the-scenes video that showed how every element, from the puppets to the set, was rendered using
Original Source
This briefing is based on reporting from Modern Retail. Use the original post for full primary-source context.
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