At the center of it, we see the latest “Best Phones Forever” episode from Google, titled “Generation Gap,” and this time you can see Pixel smoothly creating AI‑made videos while iPhone is looking around bewildered. The joke lands, but softly. It’s a mischievous, brand-safe prod, and it’s coming in the sense of impishness, not the scorched earth of the one-liner.
A softer poke in the ‘Best Phones Forever’ drama
The spot plays off the series’s established dynamic: a confident Pixel and a lovably out-of-touch iPhone. Here, an iPhone is seen trying to give chickens singing lessons; Pixel disclosed that “performance” is a product of Gemini’s generative video tools —and doubled down with a second clip of turtles running a “shell company.” It’s disarming and goofy and unambiguously on-message: Pixel can make fun videos with a tap, but iPhone can’t.

Still, the sting’s not that sharp. The ad shows the silhouette of an older-looking iPhone instead of the latest model and sidesteps even spikier points of comparison (battery life, repairability, interoperability) that have fueled punchier previous jabs. It’s more wink than wallop.
AI video is Google’s flex; Apple’s isn’t there yet
Strategically, there is a reason the AI emphasis is on video. Google is pushing Gemini and its creative capabilities (text, image and now video generation) across products. On phones, some capabilities are run on-device through Gemini Nano; more intensive tasks use cloud models, the way you see certain advanced photo edits on Pixels getting offloaded.
Apple, in contrast, has clearly hung its push publicly around private, contextually aware assistance — rewritten, summarized, a more capable Siri, and playful creative tools like custom emoji. Today there’s no consumer-fried Apple feature that uses prompts to make full videos, and that lack of recognition gives Google a neat, visual way to show people what’s possible from a service developed over decades that reaches as far back as the company’s purchase of YouTube in 2006. It’s a textbook “show, don’t tell” scenario — and a place where the depth of Apple’s ecosystem doesn’t win out by default.
Marketing subtext: So who is this ad for?
Ads in this campaign aren’t typically aimed at converting dyed‑in‑the‑wool iPhone loyalists; they’re about framing the story for fence-sitters and Android owners looking to trade up.
In emphasizing a playful, helpful instance of AI — tap to summon a quirky clip — Google shrinks down the “why would I even want this?” friction that dogs some AI marketing.”

There’s also a value message hidden in there as well: Google has been offering some premium A.I. access included with recent Pro Pixels for a temporary period of time, encouraging folks to actually engage with them instead of just treat them like bullet points. Those kinds of trials matter: adoption surges when features are advanced and easy to trigger — Pixel’s computational photography tools such as Magic Eraser and Audio Magic Eraser have demonstrated as much in the past.
The broader context: Phoning it in on AI
The premium smartphone chip battles have moved beyond cameras and silicon to a full “AI stack,” including on-device models, private cloud execution, and tight UI hooks.
Google’s pitch is creative breadth — more things you can make with fewer taps — while Apple’s pitch is trust, privacy and practicality in its suite of services.
Counterpoint Research and IDC analysts have observed that premium buyers are now considering longer support windows, ecosystem fit, and differentiated AI experiences when upgrading. Apple has remained the most successful and most profitable player in the premium category, frequently accounting for two‑thirds or more of sales above $600, while Pixel, in some markets, most notably the US and Japan, plays the role of promising challenger. For Google, highly shareable ads that spotlight an obvious capability gap can make a bigger splash than their budget would suggest.
Does the message sell buyers?
Creatively, “Generation Gap” is quotable — singing chickens and office‑bound turtles are internet‑friendly meat — and it tells potential audiences what to expect in seconds. At competitive burn, it’s literally measured. The distinction between clever and snarky is a fine one, and Google stays firmly on the clever side, perhaps wanting to steer clear of a backlash while Apple’s AI push gains momentum.
The practical upshot: If you’re looking for AI video creation on a phone today, the Pixel has a tale to spin and a basic demo to back it up. If you inhabit the Apple ecosystem and care about consistency and privacy, the ad won’t change your mind — but it might serve to lift the bar on what we should expect iPhone to do next. And that, ultimately, is the point: shape the conversation such that when people ask what an “AI on a phone” is capable of, Pixel is the name that springs to mind first.