You know that moment when your TV’s been idle too long, and a screensaver pops up—mountains, waves, maybe a cute puppy if you’re lucky?
Well, DirecTV just decided that moment should sell you something instead.
Partnering with Glance, the company is rolling out AI-powered, shoppable screensavers that turn your living room TV into a personalized retail portal. It’s part art, part ad, part… uncanny valley?
Here’s the gist: when your TV’s been still for ten minutes, it’ll show AI-generated images that could feature your face, your dog, or your favorite hangout vibe.
You’ll be able to tweak the visuals using voice prompts like “make it brighter” or “add plants over there,” and if something in the image—say, that lamp on the virtual coffee table—catches your eye, you can buy it instantly via QR code.
Glance claims its tech can scan and match visuals to over a trillion products online. That’s not a typo. A trillion.
This isn’t Glance’s first rodeo. The company’s been experimenting with lock-screen content for smartphones for a while, blurring the line between personalization and advertising.
Now, it’s taking that experiment to your TV. I can’t help but think of how Amazon’s Fire TV started adding interactive ad layers not too long ago.
It’s the same idea—your leisure time is now prime ad time.
And sure, it’s clever. TV screens have always been underused when idle, and in a world obsessed with engagement, turning “dead air” into ad space feels almost inevitable.
Still, I can’t shake the feeling that we’re inching toward a future where every glowing surface in your house wants to sell you something.
Even Netflix has been quietly testing AI-generated ad placements that blend into your content recommendations. Creepy? Maybe. Profitable? Definitely.
If you ask me, the big wildcard here isn’t the tech—it’s people. Will users actually enjoy seeing AI versions of themselves in scenic shopping vignettes?
Or will they reach for the remote faster than you can say “data privacy”?
Regulators are already sniffing around this kind of AI-driven personalization.
Just last week, California’s governor vetoed a bill that would have restricted how kids interact with chatbots, arguing that too many restrictions could kill innovation.
That tension—innovation vs. overreach—is exactly where features like DirecTV’s new screensaver experiment will live or die.
And here’s the twist that really gets me: all this is happening as big media companies like WPP ink multimillion-dollar AI deals with Google to pump out hyper-targeted marketing content.
Suddenly, the humble TV feels like the last frontier for personalized advertising.
Call me old-fashioned, but there’s something bittersweet about it. I miss the days when a screensaver was just a cosmic swirl or a flying toaster.
Now, that same idle space might whisper, “Hey, those sneakers would look great on you.” Maybe it’s progress.
Maybe it’s just marketing with better lighting. Either way, it’s coming to your living room—and your wallet better be ready.