The Toys ‘R’ Us AI commercial, crafted with OpenAI’s Sora, manages to be intriguing, eerie, and oddly captivating all at once.
As artificial intelligence becomes more prevalent in media and entertainment, there are growing concerns about tools like OpenAI’s Sora, a text-to-video creator, potentially overshadowing human creativity.
Yet, if AI-generated films are anything like the new Toys ‘R’ Us commercial about its origin story, the real worry might just be the viewing experience.
Sora generated this Toys ‘R’ Us AI commercial
WHP Global, the current owner of Toys ‘R’ Us, partnered with the Emmy-nominated agency Native Foreign to craft a short brand film titled The Origin of Toys ‘R’ Us using OpenAI’s Sora. This Toys ‘R’ Us AI commercial debuted at the 2024 Cannes Lions International Festival of Creativity and is now featured on the toy retailer’s website.
Though just over a minute in length, The Origin of Toys ‘R’ Us delivers a blend of confusion and eeriness. The Toys ‘R’ Us AI commercial portrays a young Charles Lazarus, the founder of Toys ‘R’ Us, as he conceives the idea for his famous toy store and its giraffe mascot, Geoffrey. However, the film’s setting feels more like a bizarre dream than a straightforward narrative.
In the Toys ‘R’ Us AI commercial, young Charles is depicted as a starry-eyed kid hanging out in his father’s bicycle shop. His father owns the shop. Little Charlie drifts off to sleep and dreams of a whimsical planetarium, filled with all sorts of generic toys on shelves and floating above him. It is in this magical dreamland that he encounters Geoffrey the giraffe, the store’s iconic mascot, though Geoffrey looks as if Sora used a different AI model to create him.
The film amusingly skips the part where Lazarus wakes up in an emergency room after consuming “all the mushrooms” that led to his retail fever dream.
Sora is a generative AI model developed by OpenAI, designed to create “realistic and imaginative scenes from text instructions.” According to OpenAI, Sora can generate videos about a minute long from text prompts. The model was introduced in February but is not yet available to the public.
Is Sora free or paid like ChatGPT?
The reality of Toys ‘R’ Us’s current state contrasts sharply with the rosy picture painted by its brand film. The toy store chain filed for bankruptcy in 2018, leading to the closure of all its stores. In 2021, WHP Global acquired the brand’s parent company, Tru Kids Inc. Two years later, the firm announced plans to revive the Toys ‘R’ Us brand with new locations in airports and on cruise ships, starting with a store in Dallas-Fort Worth International Airport and outlets in Macy’s department stores.
Sora keeps making headlines since its introduction. In April, YouTube’s CEO, Neal Mohan, demanded clarity from OpenAI about where Sora, its text-to-video AI tool, sourced its training data. Mohan’s message was clear: YouTube didn’t want AI systems like Sora using its content without permission. Interestingly, Google, YouTube’s parent company, had been engaging in similar practices with publisher data for its own AI initiatives.
Further controversy arose when OpenAI’s CTO, Mira Murati, was interviewed by Wall Street Journal’s Joanna Stern. Murati faced scrutiny over the transparency of Sora’s training data. The lack of clarity regarding the sources of data used to train Sora raised alarms among artists and intellectual property experts. Questions about whether OpenAI had adequately protected content creators’ rights remained unresolved.
Shortly after, OpenAI’s CEO, Sam Altman, met with major film studios to pitch Sora, aiming to revolutionize content creation in the film industry. Sora stirred interest and debate among Hollywood insiders about its potential to enhance filmmaking. However, this innovation also sparked concerns over copyright issues and the impact on creative jobs. Altman faced the challenge of addressing these concerns while promoting Sora’s benefits.
From stirring up debates in Hollywood to facing questions about data transparency, Sora’s impact has been undeniable and far-reaching. And now this Toys ‘R’ Us AI commercial, we’re not sure where to stand on this one…
Featured image credit: Toys ‘R’ Us