Categories: Technology

First Completely AI-Generated Ad Played During NBA Finals


eWEEK content and product recommendations are editorially independent. We may make money when you click on links to our partners. Learn More.

AI just reached a new milestone — or low, depending on your perspective. During game three of the NBA Finals last Wednesday, Kalshi, a prediction and exchange company that lets users gamble on anything from politics to sports, aired a dopamine-inducing commercial created entirely with AI.

AI chaos hits prime time

The Kalshi commercial barrels from one bizarre visual to another: a man sitting atop an alligator in a kiddie pool, people betting on hurricanes, and an alien chugging beer. The pace is fast, unhinged, and intentionally chaotic.

To explain the fever-dream of AI clips, the commercial ends by saying that Kalshi lets you “trade on anything, anywhere in the US,” including Oklahoma City and Indiana, where both NBA Finals teams play.

However, the most surprising thing about the commercial isn’t what it advertises, but how it was made. PJ Accetturo, a self-identified AI filmmaker, created it in just two days for only $2,000.

Inside the two-day, $2K AI production

Accetturo shared the process of creating the commercial in detail on his website. Starting with a rough script he wrote with the help of Gemini and ChatGPT, Accetturo used Gemini to turn it into a shot list and prompts for Google’s Veo 3 AI video generator.

“I always tell it to return 5 prompts at a time,” he wrote. “Any more than that and the quality starts to slip.” After pasting the prompts into Veo 3, he assembled and edited them himself with a video editing app.

Accetturo explained that it took around “300-400 generations to get 15 usable clips” from Veo 3, which took up most of the two-day commercial production. He described the final product as “GTA-style madness” with “crazy people doing crazy things.”

Bargain costs and the next big ad trend

Kalshi employee Tarek Mansour posted on X that a comparable commercial would typically cost seven figures and take months to produce. In contrast, Kalshi’s ad reached millions of viewers for just $2,000 — a 95% savings compared to traditional production methods.

While this chaotic stumble into AI commercial production may have left many scratching their heads, Accetturo believes that “high-dopamine Veo 3 videos will be the ad trend of 2025.”

As companies race to be first in AI-generated content, Kalshi’s ad may represent the beginning of a new, normal in digital advertising: faster, cheaper, and stranger.

Read eWeek’s coverage about Meta’s plans to fully automate ad creation in what Zuckerberg calls a “redefinition” of the industry.



Source link

sunrisebrief

Share
Published by
sunrisebrief

Recent Posts

Ontario man shot dead at workplace, suspect vehicle found set ablaze

Descrease article font size Increase article font size Peel Regional Police are asking for the…

12 minutes ago

2025 two-round NBA Mock Draft: From Cooper Flagg at No. 1 to a Michigan big at No. 59, our swing at every pick

Duke • Fr • 6'8" / 221 lbs Projected Team Dallas PROSPECT RNK 1st POSITION…

36 minutes ago

What could gas prices look like ahead of Canada Day weekend?

Many Canadians are crunching the numbers for what their future travels may cost them as…

44 minutes ago

visual tweaks, app updates, AI tools

Apple is testing more changes in its second developer beta for iOS 26. The update…

53 minutes ago

Lionel Messi honoured with Newell’s stand on 38th birthday

Jun 25, 2025, 05:57 AM ETNewell's Old Boys' new stand at their Coloso Marcelo Bielsa…

1 hour ago

Affordable AI Glasses Now On Kickstarter

​ Y Combinator Alum Seerslab Launches AInoon: Affordable AI Glasses Now on Kickstarter The $174…

1 hour ago