Flat Eric


title: "Flat Eric" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["puppets", "clothing-advertising-characters", "male-characters-in-advertising", "communication-design", "mascots-introduced-in-1998", "fictional-outlaws", "fictional-characters-invented-for-recorded-music"] topic_path: "law" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flat_Eric" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0

::data[format=table title="Infobox character"]

FieldValue
nameFlat Eric
series
imageFile:Flat Eric pose 2.jpg
first_date1999
last_minor
creatorQuentin Dupieux
based_on
adapted_by
designerJanet Knechtel
portrayerDrew Massey
(Levi's commercials)
Richard Coombs
nickname
alias
species
gender
occupation
affiliation
spouse
significant_other
origin
::

| name = Flat Eric | series = | franchise = | image = File:Flat Eric pose 2.jpg | alt = | caption = | first_major = | first_minor = | first_date = 1999 | last_major = | last_minor = | last_date = | creator = Quentin Dupieux | based_on = | adapted_by = | designer = Janet Knechtel | portrayer = Drew Massey (Levi's commercials) Richard Coombs | voice = | motion_actor = | full_name = | nickname = | alias = | species = | gender = | title = | occupation = | affiliation = | fighting_style = | weapon = | family = | spouse = | significant_other = | children = | relatives = | religion = | origin = | nationality =

Flat Eric is a puppet character, created by Quentin Dupieux (better known under his stage name Mr. Oizo), from Levi's commercials for Sta-Prest One Crease Denim Clothing, built by Jim Henson's Creature Shop. His name comes from an idea for a commercial that involved having a car run over his head and flattening it. The idea was not used, but the name stuck.

In the commercials, Flat Eric would ride with his friend Angel (played by Philippe Petit) around California, evading the police as a wanted criminal. As of 2025, Mr. Oizo still uses Flat Eric as a mascot.

Background

Flat Eric was based on a dog-like monkey puppet called Stéphane that was similar, but with ears and the hands were fixed. Stéphane appeared in some short films by Mr. Oizo (including a video for the track M-Seq), and had a small cult following in the United Kingdom and France. In March 1999, Levi's decided to build a television commercial campaign around the puppet, to be directed by Oizo.

The character was renamed Eric, a more "international name", in contrast to the original French name Stéphane. The name Eric was chosen after Eric Morand, one of the founders of the record label F Communications.

He was made by Janet Knechtel for Jim Henson's Creature Shop, in the United Kingdom, and was performed by Drew Massey for all the Levi's commercials. The Levi's adverts took three days to shoot. The original short films made with Stéphane cost around 15,000 francs to produce. The two Levi's adverts cost around two or three million francs each. The rights to the character were retained by Oizo and production company Partizan.

Characteristics

Eric typically does not speak, communicating only through body language. He has only spoken in the music video for "Flat Beat", doing so through electronic squawks reminiscent of Miss Othmar in the Peanuts animated specials. These squawks are similar to the ones Stéphane did in M-Seq.

::figure[src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/e/ec/FlatEricWiki01.jpg" caption="Flat Eric toy posed with a tablet"] ::

Appearances

He was featured in the music videos for "Flat Beat" and "Viandes Légumes Véhicules" by French musician Mr. Oizo and he also appeared as a prop in Series 1 of the 2001 to 2003 BBC Comedy, The Office. In August 2004, he co-starred with David Soul, in a five-million-pound commercial for Auto Trader. He has also appeared on The Big Breakfast. The puppet also featured heavily as a prop for more than ten years on SIC Radical interactive chat show Curto Circuito, being usually named as "Boneco Amarelo" (Portuguese for "Yellow Puppet"). A Flat Eric stuffed toy appeared briefly in LFO, a film that makes heavy use of and nods to synthesizers.

Flat Eric has also been featured in many magazines, including Arena, Cosmopolitan, Heat, Melody Maker, Ministry, Mixmag, Muzik, NME and The Face.

Flat Eric was introduced as an unlockable character in the mobile game Crossy Road in a 2016 update, being free for a limited time.

References

References

  1. (1999-03-20). "Entertainment | Flat Eric's cruise to the top". BBC News.
  2. Carolyne Ellis. (2000-08-29). "Eric exposed | Media". The Guardian.
  3. (2009-08-20). "Advertising icon Flat Eric to be resurrected - Marketing News". UTalkMarketing.
  4. Ellis, Carolyne. (1999-08-16). "Eric exposed".
  5. Phillips, Dom. (2001-03-31). "No strings attached | Media | guardian.co.uk". Guardian.
  6. (September 2, 2012). "Mr Oizo - Flat beat (Official Video with Flat Eric - 1999 - F Communications)".
  7. (2004-08-25). "David Soul partners Flat Eric in £5m Auto Trader ad - Brand Republic News". Brandrepublic.com.
  8. (1999-03-30). "Is Flat Eric an earner? | Media | guardian.co.uk". Guardian.
  9. (1999-04-03). "Flat Eric: King of the World". [[Bauer Media Group]].
  10. Cammy Harbison. (2016-09-13). "'Crossy Road' Dinosaur Update: Unlock New Secret Characters In The Latest Game Update". Player.One.

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puppetsclothing-advertising-charactersmale-characters-in-advertisingcommunication-designmascots-introduced-in-1998fictional-outlawsfictional-characters-invented-for-recorded-music