Las Vegas Review-Journal

Experts: Apple didn’t crush it with ad

- By Wyatte Grantham-philips

A newly released ad promoting Apple’s new ipad Pro has struck quite a nerve online.

The ad, which was released by the tech giant Tuesday, shows a hydraulic press crushing just about every creative instrument artists and consumers have used over the years — from a piano and record player, to piles of paint, books, cameras and relics of arcade games. Resulting from the destructio­n? A pristine new ipad Pro.

“The most powerful ipad ever is also the thinnest,” a narrator says at the end of the commercial.

Apple’s intention seems straightfo­rward: Look at all of the things this new product can do. But critics have called it tone-deaf — with several marketing experts noting the campaign’s execution didn’t land.

“I had a really disturbing reaction to the ad,” said Americus Reed II, professor of marketing at The School of the University of Pennsylvan­ia.

“I understood conceptual­ly what they were trying to do, but … I think the way it came across is, here is technology crushing the life of that nostalgic sort of joy (from former times).”

The ad also arrives during a time many feel uncertain or fearful about seeing their work or everyday routines “replaced” by technologi­cal advances — particular­ly amid the rapid commercial­ization of generative artificial intelligen­ce. And watching beloved items get smashed into oblivion doesn’t help curb those fears, Reed and others note.

Several celebritie­s were also among the voices critical of Apple’s “Crush!” commercial on social media this week.

“The destructio­n of the human experience. Courtesy of Silicon Valley,” actor Hugh Grant wrote on the social media platform X, in a repost of Apple CEO Tim Cook’s sharing of the ad.

Some found the ad to be a telling metaphor of the industry today — particular­ly concerns about Big Tech harming creatives.

Filmmaker Justine Bateman wrote on X that the commercial “crushes the arts.”

Experts added that the commercial marked a notable difference to marketing seen from Apple in the past — which has often taken more positive or uplifting approaches.

“My initial thought was that Apple has become exactly what it never wanted to be,” Vann Graves, executive director of the Virginia Commonweal­th University’s Brandcente­r, said.

In a statement shared with Ad Age on Thursday, Apple apologized for the ad. The outlet also reported that Apple no longer plans to run the spot on TV.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States