Flat Eric
Flat Eric is a yellow, floppy-eared glove puppet character, known for his mute, laid-back demeanor and triangular nose, created by French director and electronic musician Quentin Dupieux (under his stage name Mr. Oizo) as the star of a series of Levi's STA-PREST jeans television advertisements that debuted in Europe in 1999.[1][2]The puppet, built by the Jim Henson Creature Shop in a style reminiscent of the Muppets and performed by puppeteer Richard Coombs, features in surreal, car-based narratives where he silently grooves to techno music alongside his nerdy human sidekick, Angel, often evading absurd mishaps like police chases or wardrobe malfunctions in a dilapidated vehicle stocked with Levi's apparel.[1][2][3]
Directed by Dupieux and produced by the advertising agency Bartle Bogle Hegarty, the campaign marked a deliberate shift toward positive, innocent humor amid a youth culture weary of irony, with Flat Eric's design evolving from Dupieux's original prototype puppet named Stéphane to avoid copyright issues.[1][2]
The ads propelled Flat Eric to instant fame, earning the Best Commercials Series award at the 1999 British Television Advertising Awards and inspiring widespread merchandise, fan sites, and even a cameo in a 2009 Pharrell Williams music video by Dupieux.[1][2]
Complementing the character's rise, the campaign's soundtrack—"Flat Beat" by Mr. Oizo—topped the UK Singles Chart for two weeks in March 1999, selling millions of copies worldwide and becoming a defining track of late-1990s electronic music.[2]