Coca-Cola faces huge backlash for replacing humans with AI in its much-loved ‘Holidays are Coming’ Christmas advert: ‘How are we letting this happen?’

Coca-Cola faces huge backlash for replacing humans with AI in its much-loved ‘Holidays are Coming’ Christmas advert: ‘How are we letting this happen?’

For many people around the world, Coca-Cola’s much-loved ‘Holidays are Coming’ advert marks the beginning of Christmas.

First aired in 1995, the ad shows the soft drink giant’s red delivery trucks emblazoned with lights making festive deliveries through a snowy landscape. 

Ever since, variations of the promo have arrived in the weeks leading up to Christmas – but now the company has made the biggest change yet. 

The new 16-second ad for 2024 has been developed solely using AI, meaning all the ‘actors’ are not real people and none of the shots were filmed on location. 

While the firm claims the new commercial was an ‘efficient’ way of saving time and money, fans are not impressed.

Many have taken to X (Twitter) to slam the ad, calling it ‘garbage’, ‘ugly’ and ‘too niche’, while calling the multi-billion-dollar corporation ‘lazy’. 

One X user posted: ‘just saw an ai generated coca cola commercial on tv… genuinely how are we letting this happen. 

‘I feel like im watching the death of art and our planet unfold in front of my eyes and no one irl [in real life] seems to care.’ 

Holid-AIs are coming: Coca-Cola has used artificial intelligence to reinvent its iconic Christmas advert from three decades ago

'Maybe the worst possible thing to use AI is for the coke-cola [sic] christmas advert!!!!' The beloved advert gets millions of TV viewers in the festive spirit

‘Maybe the worst possible thing to use AI is for the coke-cola [sic] christmas advert!!!!’ The beloved advert gets millions of TV viewers in the festive spirit 

'How are we letting this happen?': One user said it feels like we are 'watching the death of art'

‘How are we letting this happen?’: One user said it feels like we are ‘watching the death of art’

A second commentator described the ad as ‘so fkn ugly’, while a third posted: ‘the world is so over if the christmas Coca Cola advert is made with AI.’ 

Someone else posted to say they’re ‘fuming’ and ‘outraged’ about the clip, adding that it looks ‘utter s***, while another said it made them feel ‘immediately sick’.

Since the original nearly 30 years ago, Coca-Cola’s annual ‘Holidays are Coming’ adverts have used real actors and two tonne trucks decked with Christmas lights. 

But this year’s ad has been developed solely using AI, meaning every element the viewer sees is a figment of a machine’s ‘imagination’. 

Generally, the use of AI in advertising and the arts has proved a controversial move, as some critics feel it forces creative types out of work.

One commentator called it ‘kinda sad’, while someone else posted: ‘Maybe the worst possible thing to use AI is for the coke-cola [sic] christmas advert!!!!’ 

Coca-Cola has said the new commercial – made with three AI studios Secret Level, Silverside AI and Wild Card – was an ‘efficient’ way of saving time and money. 

It relied on ‘generative’ AI – where clever AI systems are trained on a large amount of data to generate new video, images, text and other content. 

'Too niche': The company said its new commercial was an 'efficient' way of saving time and money, but fans are not impressed

‘Too niche’: The company said its new commercial was an ‘efficient’ way of saving time and money, but fans are not impressed

'Kinda sad': The use of AI in advertising and the arts has proved a controversial move, as some critics feel it forces creative types out of work

‘Kinda sad’: The use of AI in advertising and the arts has proved a controversial move, as some critics feel it forces creative types out of work

Someone else said they are 'fuming' and 'outraged' about the new advert, adding that it looks 'utter s***'

Someone else said they are ‘fuming’ and ‘outraged’ about the new advert, adding that it looks ‘utter s***’ 

'So ugly': Coca-Cola wanted to save time and money by making a commercial with AI rather than hiring out actors, props and locations

‘So ugly’: Coca-Cola wanted to save time and money by making a commercial with AI rather than hiring out actors, props and locations 

Are the simple things in life being ruined by AI? Artificial intelligence tech has been especially popular with firms since the success of ChatGPT

Are the simple things in life being ruined by AI? Artificial intelligence tech has been especially popular with firms since the success of ChatGPT

'Felt immediately sick': The ad used generative AI - clever computer systems that are trained on a large amount of data to generate new video, images, text and other content

‘Felt immediately sick’: The ad used generative AI – clever computer systems that are trained on a large amount of data to generate new video, images, text and other content

The new 16-second clip for 2024 has been developed solely using AI , meaning all the 'actors' are not real people and none of the shots were filmed on location

The new 16-second clip for 2024 has been developed solely using AI , meaning all the ‘actors’ are not real people and none of the shots were filmed on location

Javier Meza, the EU chief marketing officer at Coca-Cola, said the company wanted to adapt to ‘today’s times’, with the use of a more diverse cast and AI technology. 

‘We didn’t start by saying, “OK, we need to do this with AI”,’ Mr Meza told Marketing Week. 

‘The brief was, we want to bring Holidays Are Coming into the present and then we explored AI as a solution to that.’ 

In an official company statement, a spokesman called it an ‘exciting venture into AI-generated storytelling’. 

‘[It] demonstrates Coca-Cola’s commitment to embracing innovation, leveraging our collaborations with top creative and technology partners, while staying true to its core values – spreading happiness and creating real magic.’ 

While the holiday advert’s history only spans the past 30 years, Santa has been featured in Coca‑Cola ads since the 1920s. 

However, it’s a total urban myth that Coca‑Cola created the legend of Santa Claus, as is the rumour that Coca‑Cola made Santa red. 

Before Coca‑Cola was invented in 1886, Santa Claus had appeared in numerous illustrations and books wearing a scarlet coat. 

Coca-Cola's much-loved 'Holidays are Coming' advert shows the soft drink giant's red delivery trucks emblazoned with lights making festive deliveries through a snowy landscape. Pictured, a shot from the 1995 original

Coca-Cola’s much-loved ‘Holidays are Coming’ advert shows the soft drink giant’s red delivery trucks emblazoned with lights making festive deliveries through a snowy landscape. Pictured, a shot from the 1995 original 

Chicago-born artist Fred Mizen painted this department-store Santa in a crowd drinking the now-famous beverage

Chicago-born artist Fred Mizen painted this department-store Santa in a crowd drinking the now-famous beverage 

However, the fizzy drinks firm claims to have played a role in shaping the fat, jolly character we know today.

In 1930, Chicago-born artist Fred Mizen was commissioned to paint Santa drinking the beverage in front of the world’s largest soda fountain, located in the Famous-Barr department store in downtown St Louis, surrounded by adoring children. 

Mizen’s painting was used in print ads that Christmas season, appearing in The Saturday Evening Post in December 1930. 

The following year, Coca‑Cola commissioned Michigan-born illustrator Haddon Sundblom to develop advertising images using Santa Claus.

For inspiration, Sundblom turned to Clement Clark Moore’s 1822 poem ‘A Visit From St. Nicholas’, commonly called ”Twas the Night Before Christmas’. 

Moore’s description of St. Nick led to an image of a warm, friendly, pleasantly plump and human Santa. 

From a cocaine-infused patent medicine to a modern health hazard: A brief history of Coca-Cola

Coca-Cola was created by a Confederal Colonel living in Georgia named John Pemberton. 

After being injured in the Civil War, Pemberton became addicted to morphine, and sought a solution for his cravings.

In 1885, he introduced the first version of the now-famous beverage as Pemberton’s French Wine Coca, an alcoholic drink patented as a nerve tonic. 

However, a year later in 1866, prohibition laws began to be enforced in Georgia – so Pemberton developed Coca-Cola, the non-alcoholic version of his wine. 

When launched, Coca-Cola’s two key ingredients were cocaine derived from the coca leaf and the caffeine from kola nut, leading to the name. 

This formula was made with syrup and carbonated water, and was thought to be able to cure ailments such as addiction, impotence, and indigestion.

Pemberton died in 1888 – the same year he sold the majority of his company to Asa Candler, an Atlanta businessman.

Candler is credited with the nationwide expansion of Coca-Cola, and he pioneered the company’s revolutionary bottling network.

In 1903, Coca-Cola switched from using fresh coca leaves to ‘spent’ coca leaves (what’s left over after the cocaine has been removed) – a practice thought to have continued until the 1920s. 

As the brand continued to evolve, so did its wildly successful advertising practices – and more than 100 years later, Coca-Cola still sets the example for branding in the US and worldwide.

Today, Coca-Cola is still the undisputed king of the approximate $100 billion US soda industry.

But the excessively sugary flagship product – vastly different to Pemberton’s original creation – is thought to directly fuel heart disease, diabetes and more. 

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