Chris Hemsworth and Elsa Pataky in the Alexa+ Super Bowl ad Amazon Share on Facebook Share on X Google Preferred Share to Flipboard Show additional share options Share on LinkedIn Share on Pinterest Share on Reddit Share on Tumblr Share on Whats App Send an Email Print the Article Post a Comment In the Super Bowl ad for Amazon's Alexa+ AI assistant, Chris Hemsworth fears that the AI is trying to kill him. Perhaps it will trigger a rogue garage door, or close the pool cover while he is out for a swim. Ultimately, of course, he learns that the AI just wants him to be happy, offering a massage to relieve his tension. Watch: As it happens, AI anxiety seems to be running high, and the Super Bowl is poised to become the center of that conversation. Even as AI threatens every part of the entertainment business, live sports is still the king of advertising, and even the biggest of the tech giants are gladly ponying up the $8-$10 million fees (and millions more in production costs) to secure an ad slot. Related Stories Business Super Bowl Ads: Star Talent Fees Down As AI Surges TV Celebrities Fuel Super Bowl 2026's Ad Lineup: Sabrina Carpenter, George Clooney, Emma Stone, Bradley Cooper and More Sure, AI might steal all our time (and maybe our jobs, or our lives?), but for now, these companies are paying handsomely just to get a tiny slice of human attention. Google Gemini, for example, is taking an earnest approach in its ad, showing how it hopes users can take advantage of it's tech. Watch: But it was the public tit-for-tat between Anthropic and OpenAI that is garnering the most dropped jaws. For some background: OpenAI announced plans to bring advertising to its ChatGPT product, as it seeks to drive revenue to help cover the enormous expenses of building out an AI company. Anthropic, which has both professional AI tools and the Claude AI assistant, is using its Super Bowl ad to take a not-so-veiled shot at OpenAI. Watch: "All the time, we see proof that advertising works brilliantly in the right context. We're using advertising's biggest stage to ask a simple question: does it belong everywhere? So we made funny ads about how unfunny it would be," says Felix Richter, CCO at Mother, the agency that produced the ad. "People asking AI about their health, their relationships, their business. Then a sponsored answer. We don't need to explain why that's wrong. We just need to show it." But the Claude ad clearly struck a nerve: Sam Altman, the CEO of OpenAI, responded in a post on X: "I guess it's on brand for Anthropic doublespeak to use a deceptive ad to critique theoretical deceptive ads that aren't real, but a Super Bowl ad is not where I would expect it," he wrote, adding that he thought they were funny, although his response doesn't sound like he was laughing. "Anthropic serves an expensive product to rich people. We are glad they do that and we are doing that too, but we also feel strongly that we need to bring AI to billions of people who can't pay for subscriptions." So OpenAI will use the Super Bowl to make its own case. "As for our Super Bowl ad: it's about builders, and how anyone can now build anything," Altman said. But in a Super Bowl filled with AI ads, both for AI chatbots and using AI tech, will it resonate with the human watching? Or will it become a relic destined for a deep corner of an LLM? THR Newsletters Sign up for THR news straight to your inbox every day Subscribe Sign Up Representation Influencer Rebecca Zamolo Signs With CAA (Exclusive) winter olympics 2026 Snoop Meets Tucci in Milan: Behind NBCU's Creator Blitz at the Winter Olympics siriusxm SiriusXM In Neutral: Audio Giant Ends Year at 33 Million Subscribers, Revenue Declines Super Bowl Super Bowl Ads: Star Talent Fees Down As AI Surges Spotify Spotify Adds Physical Books to Audiobook Offering Production News State Legislator Nick Schultz to Introduce Bill Incentivizing Postproduction in California Representation Influencer Rebecca Zamolo Signs With CAA (Exclusive) winter olympics 2026 Snoop Meets Tucci in Milan: Behind NBCU's Creator Blitz at the Winter Olympics siriusxm SiriusXM In Neutral: Audio Giant Ends Year at 33 Million Subscribers, Revenue Declines Super Bowl Super Bowl Ads: Star Talent Fees Down As AI Surges Spotify Spotify Adds Physical Books to Audiobook Offering Production News State Legislator Nick Schultz to Introduce Bill Incentivizing Postproduction in California