DesignRush
  • AGENCY DIRECTORY
    Branding & Creative
    Website & Interface
    Marketing
    Software & App
    IT Services
    Branding & Creative
    • Full-service Digital
    • Creative Agencies
    • Product Design
    • Logo Design Companies
    • Graphic Design Companies
    • Package Design
    • Video Production Companies
    • PR Agencies
    • Design Studios
    • Reputation Management
    Branding & Creative
    Website & Interface
    • Web Design Companies
    • eCommerce Development
    • Web Development Companies
    • WordPress Web Design Companies
    • WordPress Development Companies
    • Magento Development Companies
    • Shopify eCommerce Development
    • UX Designers
    • Small Business Web Design
    Website & Interface
    Marketing
    • SEO Agencies
    • PPC Agencies
    • Social Media Marketing
    • Search Engine Marketing Agencies
    • Email Marketing
    • Small Business SEO Companies
    • Local SEO
    • Google Ads Agencies
    • Advertising Agencies
    • eCommerce SEO Agencies
    • Media Buying Agencies
    • Content Marketing Agencies
    • Lead Generation Companies
    Marketing
    Software & App
    • Software Development
    • Offshore Software Development
    • Outsourcing Software Development
    • Mobile App Developers
    • VR & Augmented Reality Companies
    • AI Companies
    • Android App Development Companies
    • iOS Development Companies
    • Blockchain Development Companies
    • Software Testing
    Software & App
    IT Services
    • IT Services Companies
    • IT Outsourcing Companies
    • Managed Service Providers
    • Cybersecurity Companies
    • Big Data Analytics Companies
    • Cloud Consulting Companies
    • Staff Augmentation Services
    • SharePoint Consultants
    IT Services
  • List Your AgencyFind An Agency
  • Marketplace
  • Awards
    DesignRush Design Awards
    Award Winners by Category:
    • All the Latest Winners
    • Website Design Awards
    • App Design Awards
    • Logo Design Awards
    • Print Design Awards
    • Packaging Design Awards
    • Video Design Awards

    Each month we evaluate and recognize award-winning designs in these industries.

    see the latest winners
    Looking for Inspiration?

    Browse the best designs by category:

    • Best Website Designs
    • Best Logo Designs
    • Best Print Designs
    • Best App Designs
    • Best Packaging Designs
    • Best Video Designs
  • Trending Brands
List Your AgencyFind An Agency
Trending Brands
  • Latest News
  • Interviews
  • Podcast
  • Trends
  • Trending Brands
  • PJ Pereira on How AI Is Changing Creative Advertising | Podcast 1
Join Our Newsletter
Get your weekly dose of news, interviews & trends
Join our newsletter
Join Our Newsletter
Get your weekly dose of news, interviews & trends
Thanks for subscribing!
Join our newsletter
By completing this form you agree to the Terms of Use & IP and our Privacy Policy
Want to be Featured?
Contact our news team at spotlight@designrush.com
Get in touch

PJ Pereira on How AI Is Changing Creative Advertising | Podcast 1

Artificial Intelligence 2,758
PJ Pereira on How AI Is Changing Creative Advertising | Podcast 1
Article by Vianca MeyerVianca Meyer
8 min read
Published: April 27, 2023

As the advertising industry continues to evolve, the use of artificial intelligence (AI) is becoming increasingly prevalent. Brands and agencies are recognizing the potential of AI to enhance their creative processes and improve the effectiveness of their campaigns.

In this podcast interview, PJ Pereira, founder of Pereira O'Dell, shares his insights on the impact of AI on the advertising industry. Pereira also discusses the benefits of using AI in the creative processes of advertising agencies, highlighting how it can help brands connect with their target audiences more meaningfully.

designrush

Who Is PJ Pereira?

PJ Pereira is an industry leader in advertising with over 20 years of experience in the industry. He is hailed as an advertising and entertainment pioneer and is the founder of the award-winning creative agency Pereira O’Dell, an Emmy winner, multiple Cannes Grand Prix winner, and an ongoing member of the Ad Council Board of Directors.

Spotlight: You must have been an incredibly creative kid. What was it that initially influenced you?

PJ Pereira: I always liked to draw and to write. Later I started to play on computers and learned to program. It was easier to find me drawing or writing or programming, which are, in my head, all creative activities, instead of playing soccer, like most of the other kids.  

I think that the creative life has always been there for me, it was an impulse more than anything. The difficulty was to keep it alive instead of just letting go and joining the rest of the pack, you know?

The creative process and the creative mind are a very inefficient mind. But the difference between creative people and non-creative people is that I don't care about the inefficiency. I don't care about having a thousand bad ideas that I'm going to throw away because when one of them hits, when the thousand and first one hits, then it's original. It’s different and interesting. 

That is the most difficult part for a kid growing up. I think it's a problem with our educational system and the way we set things up in society. We make efficiency feel like such an important thing. It kills originality. 

It was easy for our generation to pick up those different types of skills and find interest in many different things. The hardest part is not letting go of too many of them so you can carry them with you throughout your career.  

There's something kind of magical happening right now that I like. If you turn on TikTok and look at what's on it, most of it is honestly garbage. And that's awesome!  

It means that people are producing content without worrying too much if it's great or not. When people create things at volume without worrying about the quality, that's when creativity is happening. It's very counterintuitive, but that's what it is. That's what the rational mind doesn't understand. If you take the rationality of it, it’s all backward. “Oh, so you mean that creating and doing bad things is what leads to good? No, it can't be.”

What you're saying is that rationality and creativity do not mix. 

I'm not saying that they don’t mix. I'm saying that they are opposite processes. The rational starts from point A and tries to get to point B as quickly, sharply, economically, and efficiently as possible. Creative thinking understands what point A is and what point B is and tries a bunch of things. Once there's a line connecting, it's a wiggly, curvy, and multi-dimensional line.

One is focused on getting there in the most efficient way. The other one is trying to get there in a way that is not expected.  

It's an interesting way for people, especially on TikTok, to find their niche. 

The beauty of the creative process, whether you're writing a book or making a TikTok, is the freedom to fail. Failure is a part of the process. I do martial arts as a hobby, for example. I noticed that on days that I'm allowing myself to make more mistakes, I don’t mind losing a fight because I want to try different things. That's part of the process of discovering new techniques and new ways of doing things.  

The freedom to test is quintessential for the creative process. That's why we play. This is not a human thing; all mammals are hardwired to play. That's one of the biggest differences neurologically between a mammal and any other kind of creature. Insects don't play, but a lion cub plays. You discover the rules of the world, whether they are physics or social. You discover by trying things.  

That's why so many people say that children lose their creativity along the way because they eventually understand that playing is great for discovery, but a lot of time leads to the wrong conclusion. You're taught that failure is bad. When in the pursuit of efficiency, we lose our playfulness and our creativity. When you look at TikTok, or social media in general, it is an environment of playfulness. People do the craziest things, and they don't care that much. 

What was the toughest part of breaking into that industry for you? 

It wasn't hard to break in. It was the beginning of the web, so I sent an email to a couple of agencies in Brazil. I told them, “The internet is going to have something to do with advertising and I can help you figure that out.” I got hired immediately. One email, one conversation, and I was in.  

The whole viability of this thing called the Internet and its importance as a medium wasn't established. Everyone who was putting any energy into it was just trying to see if it worked, while everyone else who had important jobs had assignments, deadlines, budgets, and results to prove. They thought it was just a distraction.  

I probably got lucky by putting my bets on something that was a winner. It became more important than the other things. I was putting all my energy into that, and it worked for me. But there were lots of moments when I stopped and talked to my friends. “Should I just stop trying this? It's not going anywhere. Should I just join the rest and start to write TV spots and print ads for brands because that's where the money is? That's where the power is.”  

Would you say the encouragement from your peers was what made you stick it out?  

It's funny that you're asking that. I never thought about it that way, but I remember at that time having other friends who were going through the same process. There was a group of people who were trying to convince the advertising world that the Internet had a future. We had to create this kind of support group among us and when we got sadder or down, the other ones worked to cheer us up. That's important.

They weren't all my friends. Some of us were so competitive that we didn't even like each other. But we needed each other to thrive. We couldn’t afford to have any of our nemesis give up. We would say, “I do not like you. I do not want you to succeed too much. I want to do better than you. But stay there, because without you, I lose my sense of reason.”  

There's something to be said for looking at how other people are doing things and wanting to exceed that limit.  

Yes, having a support group doesn't necessarily mean having a family that loves you or having friends that care about you. Sometimes it is having a nemesis that is going to tease you and is going to say, “Do not quit because I need to meet you tomorrow.” These conversations matter. They kept me on board. 

What do you think would be great advice to give someone who's trying to break into the industry the way it is now?  

Artificial intelligence. I have no question about that whatsoever.  

My son is 16 years old, and he wants to be a filmmaker. I was talking to my wife a few months ago and telling her that I remember the day that my uncle, who was a programmer, pulled me aside and said, “You're a creative kid. Let me give you something interesting.” He pulled out the computer and put it in front of the TV. And he taught me how to program.  

That's how I started. I ended up becoming a professional programmer and working with him. That day I was taught how computers operated and that taught me how to think. Not only as a human being but how machines think. That changed everything. That put me on track for later when the internet came, I could understand creativity in the context of computers. That changed my creative possibilities. 

I was thinking about the equivalent of that for my son. What is the gift that I can give him that will set him apart? I have no question that it is the ability to learn how artificial intelligence operates and how computers learn.  

We at DesignRush have worked in AI as well. There's been quite an influx of prominent people in tech, Elon Musk being one of them, who have called to halt AI for several months because they are worried about how fast it's developing and the societal risks that could have. Do you share the same views on this? 

It's a very important thought. It seems a little performative to ask for a six-month halt. I feel like they know that it's not going to happen. What exactly are we trying to accomplish other than to say, “Oh, I told you so.” A lot of the people who have been signing these letters have been talking about the ethics of AI for years. Their concerns are very reasonable concerns that AI operates based on goals and that it doesn't have ethical or empathetic controls over its drive to achieve that goal.  

What you see on a philosophical level is that computers learn by imitation the same way that we learn by imitation when we are kids, right? When machines learn, their cycles are much faster than ours, so they try more things. That's why they are having so much success in creative fields like generating images because they try more things than humans can.  

I think it's a very reasonable conversation that we need to have. But it takes time and the development of AI, which operates in cycles of two weeks, does not allow us. I don't have an answer for that, but we need to find a way to accelerate the conversation and decelerate the development. It is a paradox, but we also need to bring more people into playing with AI.  

We need to bring more people to play with small-scale kinds of things because that is going to give us a better sense of what can be done, what cannot be done, and what should not be done. Once we have these perspectives from the inside, as a society we're going to be able to have a wiser opinion.

All our opinions right now are influenced by a perspective that comes mostly from sci-fi books and movies, that always depicts AI as the villain and computers as monsters that one day are going to try to try to dominate us. 

Tags:
designrush podcast pereira o'dell 
Vianca Meyer
Vianca Meyer
Senior Editor and Podcast Host
Vianca Meyer is a seasoned digital marketer adept in copy editing, copywriting, research, and SEO. Her content for YEO Messaging resulted in a 30% increase in customer acquisition, while her social media campaigns for a travel website generated a 60% boost in total traffic. She now ensures that content on DesignRush covers industry trends and aligns with user intent.
Follow on: LinkedIn Send email: vianca@designrush.com
Want to be Featured?
Contact our news team at spotlight@designrush.com
Get in touch

Latest Artificial Intelligence News

view all
John Maeda is VP of Engineering and Head of Computational Design and AI Platform at Microsoft
Microsoft Exec Explains Why Business Leaders Must Stop Treating AI Like Magic
By Ricardo Esteves  |  1 day ago  |  5 min read
Graphics of an animated boy wearing a bear suit in the mountains with Salesforce + Convergence logos
Salesforce Positions Its Brand as AI Frontrunner with Convergence Acquisition
By Katherine Maclang  |  2 days ago  |  4 min read
Pavel (Paul) Sher, Founder and CEO of FuseBase
How to Turn AI Agents Into Power Players Across 4 Key Departments
By Anna Hecht  |  3 days ago  |  3 min read
Dr. Minseung Kim, founder and CEO of Vidio
How VIDIO Fixes the Number 1 Bottleneck in Content Creation: Video Editing
By Andrea Surnit  |  3 days ago  |  4 min read
view all

Most Popular Artificial Intelligence Stories

A teen showing off his muscles with the mirror showing his mom taking the photo
Apple's New 'Clean Up' Commercial Hits Home with Relatable Humor
By Roberto Orosa  |  1 month ago  |  2 min read
Rick Rubin practices vibe coding using Anthropic's Claude
Rick Rubin Collaborates with Anthropic to Simplify AI Coding for Everyone
By Jermaine Dela Cruz  |  2 weeks ago  |  2 min read
Meta's AI app
Meta Unveils Own AI App with Voice & Memory to Challenge ChatGPT
By Arman Lorenzo Burias  |  1 month ago  |  2 min read
Mark Zuckerberg speaks at a tech conference, holding a microphone, with the Meta logo against a purple background
Meta Could Rewrite the Rules of Digital Advertising with End-to-End AI Control
By Jermaine Dela Cruz  |  1 month ago  |  3 min read
DesignRush

DesignRush is the premier agency directory, awards platform, and media hub connecting brands with top agencies in software, app development, design, and marketing. We deliver vetted reviews, insights, and trends to drive business growth.

For Businesses

  • Agencies Categories
  • Agency Ranking Methodology
  • Trends Articles
  • FAQs

For Agencies

  • Benefits Of Listing With Us
  • Submit An Agency
  • Sponsorship
  • All Agencies

About DesignRush

  • Team & Story
  • Press Releases

Get in Touch

18117 Biscayne Blvd
Miami, FL 33160
United States
  • Contact Us
© DesignRush 2025, All Rights Reserved
  • Sitemap
  • Terms of Use & IP
  • Privacy Policy
  • Accessibility
  • Fraud Protection