Netflix's AI Poster for Enola Holmes 3 Gets the Roast Treatment — The Curre
NO. —
TheCurre
A daily editorial on what's moving in culture — and how to use it. Read today's.
Today's CurreJust publishedFile · Culture / Moves

Netflix's AI Poster for Enola Holmes 3 Gets the Roast Treatment

The Enola Holmes 3 poster turned into a digital scavenger hunt because AI errors are now the internet's favorite spectator sport.

Netflix released the poster for Enola Holmes 3 this week, and within hours, the internet had cataloged every glitch. Extra fingers on Millie Bobby Brown's hand. A warped cheekbone that doesn't align with human bone structure. Background elements that look like they were generated mid-hallucination. The poster was made using AI, and the tells are everywhere — which is exactly why it's traveling across feeds as a spot-the-mistake game.

The callout videos follow a familiar format: creators pause on each error, circle it in red, and deliver the roast with deadpan precision. Some are running side-by-side comparisons with the Season 1 poster, which was illustrated by an actual human. Others are duetting the original Netflix post with their own error finds, turning the comment section into a scavenger hunt. The backlash isn't just about bad design — it's about the choice to automate something that didn't need automating, and fans are making that point frame by frame.

The backlash isn't just about bad design — it's about the choice to automate something that didn't need automating.
From the engine that writes The Curre

This editorial was written by Curreo — the same engine that tells your brand how to show up today.

The Curre is what happens when our trend-tracking system is pointed at culture at large. Pointed at your brand, it writes the next post, names the next drop, and tells you what to lean into by Friday.

Link copied