Main/Uncanny Valley/Graphics/Sandbox

Advertising

 * Evil Dead Orville. (Orville Redenbacher popcorn.) Someone had the bright idea to use a real actor for his body, and to computer generate his head, since the original was dead and they didn't want to use his Identical Grandson.
 * Mr. Six, the dancing man in the Six Flags commercials, a disturbing looking character with an equally disturbing mask for a face. Mr. Six's true identity is Danny Teeson of Queer Eye for the Straight Girl.
 * The plastic Duracell family, the Puttermans.
 * Even worse is the fact that they are LAUGHING after someone has basically DIED.
 * The trailer for Alan Carr's new chat show is wrong. Wrongwrongwrongwrong. FUUUUCGETITAWAY!
 * Burger King, oh god..EAT LIKE SNAKE. For those who don't want to open yet another browser tab...it features a man slithering about in a snakelike fashion then UNHINGING HIS JAW to swallow a burger whole. It's..well..eating like a snake does. And I have no idea why they thought that was a good idea and would make you want to eat the burgers. The music is worthy of a Crowning Moment of Funny though.
 * This Panasonic ad..or whatever. There is just something creepy about those poodles. And the lady..I mean.. WHAT IS it with her arms and legs?
 * The "Pace of Life" advert for Playstation 2, which features regular humans animated in stop-motion. Not terrifying, but very unsettling.
 * Bob, the Enzyte Man, is a real dude but he's creepy as hell with his soulless smile and perpetual wave. And the less said about his implied perpetual erection, the better.
 * A new Evian ad featured babies breakdancing to the Sugarhill Gang. Some found it cute, many found it incredibly creepy. The babies are CGI and look human except for a few disturbing features.
 * A recent commercial for Swedish Kavli had a baby who starts to dance after tasting their food. When the baby's body switches from real to CGI, its arms are noticeably thinner! The dance moves only made it more freaky, which is probably why this didn't run for long.
 * The parents make it a little better with their Adorkableness, though.
 * This Sprite ad (poster? painted? who knows...) that was found on a pillar in a mall.
 * The Charles Schwab rotoscoped ads.
 * In the UK, Lynx deodorant ran an advertising campaign in which a grinning man made entirely of chocolate broke off pieces of himself. The advert was eventually banned for being too disturbing. See it here. They're using the same ad for the American version, called Axe. It's still damn creepy.
 * This TV-ad for Diet Coke, featuring creepy big-headed, big-eyed pale puppets. One thing is for sure, whoever is responsible for this, was not Genre Savvy...
 * In his debut, the Jolly Green Giant wasn't so Jolly as he was a "Robotic Moving, Maliciously Grinning Evil Green Giant".
 * Commercials for ringtones in Italy feature CGI-created Funny Animals doing Chipmunk-style covers of pop-song that are popular when the ads air. Funny animals, yeah. When it comes to humans, however...
 * The ads for Omnaris nasal spray feature a whole squad of really bloody creepy people. They look human, but the only muscles that work on their faces control their mouth.
 * This piece of Mind Screw, courtesy of Cadbury Chocolate: two expressionless children twitching their computer-generated eyebrows to music. That this ad has no direct relation to the product only makes it creepier. It received so much complaints in Hong Kong that it had to be taken down.
 * At some point, Mayflower realized nothing made you want to move out of your house faster than seeing a giant, horrifying marionette girl walking the streets of your neighborhood.
 * The crash test dummies in this Kit Kat Chunky commercial have rather unsettling facial expressions, especially at the end. Steve Madden Shoes used to feature similar images in its advertising.
 * This internet ad for Zappos.com -with its androgynous, Stepford-grinning CGI representative -- is not something you want to come across late at night.
 * The new "My American Girl" portion of the American Girl doll company features animated versions of their dolls, seen on this very Wiki. The dolls themselves are not creepy, but their cartoon counterparts are downright soulless.
 * Old Navy's Supermodelquins. You have the eerie over-perfect look of a mannequin and words come out of their mouth but their lips don't move.
 * This took on a whole new level of creepy during a Christmas 2010 ad, where one of the mannequins was giving sweaters to her family, including her twin brothers--one of whom was a mannequin, and one who was a real human child. One of the other mannequins remarks "now I can tell them apart"
 * The Wrightnows from the Netflix commercials may be played by real humans, but there's nothing "human" about them. Creepiest. Family. EVER.
 * That's why poor grandpa always looks so unhappy and seems to get his only enjoyment from horror movies. He's forced to be around them 24/7!
 * In December 2010, Andrex toilet tissue in the UK, well known for its long-running campaign with real life labrador pups, launched an advertisement replacing real dogs with CGI-rendered dog characters behaving like humans.
 * Early 00s CGI spokesman in German ISP T-Online's campaign, Robert T-Online
 * This UK advert for Galaxy chocolate. There's just something not-quite-right about that woman...
 * This Pedigree Dentastix commercial shows that dogs can enter uncanny valley as well. There is something horribly wrong about a dog with human teeth.
 * Dogs with human teeth, you say? Reminds me of smile.jpg.
 * Etrade babies. Their big adorable baby eyes stare unblinkingly ahead while their mouths move independently of their faces. Shudder.
 * Cheeky Bingo. What has that thing done to everyone's mouths!?
 * This 80s Kinder ad was taken off air because it scared children. I see why...
 * It was taken off the air because it gave an older gentleman a fatal heart attack.
 * This ad (on this very Wiki to be exact) for something called My Free Farm. Hm... sounds good enouHOLY SHIT WHAT ARE THOSE THINGS?!?!?!
 * This McDonald's Happy Meal ad, called Suzi Van Zoom, Suzi already looks creepy as hell, but take a look at the MONKEY when you watch it. CREEPIEST. THING. EVER.
 * The gynoid mascot used in the Svedka commercials is supposed to be sexy, but ends up coming off as more creepy than anything to some. [[media:robot-turn-ons_996.jpg|Here]] [[media:Svedka_5839.jpg|she]] [[media:svedka_sm_4716.jpg|is]]. Ew...
 * Glamour magazine once saw fit to announce a "secret issue" for iPad with . . . this monstrosity. As if magazine covers weren't already in the Photoshop of Uncanny Horrors.
 * Max, the little CGI spokesman in Blue Tax commercials. His movements are stiff and jerky, and his face squashes when he speaks. He's usually wall-eyed. The other workers aren't much better, looking considerably more "realistic".
 * Not helped at all by the very obvious Mad Libs Dialogue when the contact information is read off.
 * Good God, it's like Garry's Mod meets Video Brinquedo!
 * The latest ads for Gerber Graduates have babies doing things that babies naturally should not be able to do and it is quite unsettling.
 * This Hot Pockets Snackers commercial. For a human actress, the gal playing the waitress comes off as robotic.
 * Those computer generated "children" from the McDonald's "Joy is a Gift" ad campaign. They are not cute. They're not even ugly cute.
 * This anti-drug PSA where the eyes are very large on the otherwise typical looking people. It's supposed to represent the dialated pupils associated with being under the influence of certain drugs.
 * This 90s Canadian drug PSA. The grotesque puppets (which look like a sickening cross between Jim Henson's Muppets and The Garbage Pail Kids) invoke this enough already, but then the drug dealer takes off his sunglasses and... Lord have mercy...
 * This advertisement for MiO, where all the anthropomorphic animals have disturbingly realistic faces.
 * An ad for Inventhelp features an actor that appears to be CG on close inspection.