![]() ![]() ![]() Slate's Super Bowl ad round-up found the Pixel ad a little creepy, focusing on the bit where Amy Schumer uses Magic Eraser to remove ex-boyfriends from her photos. (Yes, having a guy in a banana hammock mucking up your photo gets a cheap laugh but seriously, you want Magic Eraser to remove that guy post-haste.) And while Amy Schumer, Giannis Antetokounmpo and Doja Cat all make celebrity cameos in the Pixel spot, there's not a parade of B-Listers distracting you from the ultimate message of the ad: You will take better photos with the Pixel 7. ![]() Google didn't fall into the trap that trips up so many other Super Bowl ads where you make a joke at the expense of muddying up your message. Not all of us are great photographers, but the Pixel's features can fix what our limited skill set has wrought, not just salvaging photos we'd otherwise have to bin but producing things we'd actually want to share with other people. Perhaps, it's because I'm very familiar with both features - I've run Magic Eraser tests and also put Photo Unblur through its paces - but I thought Google's ad really emphasized what's great about the Pixel 7. But the ad also touted Photo Unblur, new to the Pixel 7 lineup, and its ability to take blurry photos and clear up faces - even on images you shot with something other than a Pixel phone. The bulk of the ad focused on Magic Eraser, which lets you remove unwanted photo-bombers, objects and other image-marring background distractions from the shot with the press of a button. Google's 90-second spot - that's going to cost you extra, folks - highlights the photo-editing tools available in its latest Pixel phones. ![]()
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