The campaign, branded under the slogan "Group project, but make it 1776," envisions Thomas Jefferson drafting the document while managing persistent interruptions from Ben Franklin. The narrative leans heavily on Google’s ecosystem, showing the founders scheduling meetings via Google Meet and using Gemini to refine the national seal. In one sequence, the group relies on the chatbot to draft a firm refusal of King George III’s access request to their shared document.
While the tone remains lighthearted, the production has sparked a polarized reaction. Critics on social media, including historian Angus Johnston, labeled the effort "tone deaf," arguing that the ad fails to make a coherent case for AI as a legitimate tool for political organizing or human collaboration. Despite the backlash, the commercial avoids the controversial implication that the Declaration’s prose required artificial enhancement, focusing instead on the logistics of remote cooperation. The ad’s aesthetic itself carries a distinct, uncanny glow, leading some viewers to speculate that the footage was generated using AI tools.
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