Are Women Ever Portrayed as Really Moronic in Commercials?

Ha! Thanks for making me laugh. I hate that commercial so much.

Hal is great. The episode where he quits his job because the elementary school students at career day made him feel bad was key.

Kid: Your job sounds awful.
Hal: (Laughter) Of course it’s awful; it’s a job. See, you kids have to realize that all jobs are awful, and there is nothing you can do about that. They’re tedious and boring.
Kid: Being a fireman isn’t boring.
Hal: True, but you have to take in consideration the high mortality rate. It’s real easy to get killed in a fire.
Kid: My daddy’s a fireman.
Hal: Oh, and I’m sure he’s probably gonna be fine.
Other Kid: So the only reason you like your job is 'cause you won’t get killed in a fire?
Hal: Yes.

Hahaha! Okay, hijack over.

That would be me … :wink:

I always assumed this was an SNL parody ad. Plus I hate that guy telling me who I do or do not drive like. Makes me want to run him over.

I hjust realized there’s two different versions of TurboTax commercials.

On the History Channel and Discovery channel, an intelligent-sounding man calmly explains how TurboTax is like a GPS.

On network television, a woman starts off the commercial by saying “My husband can’t follow directions, so that’s why I got him a GPS. ‘HONEY, I DON’T KNOW WHERE I
I AM!’ What’s why I got TurboTax, because it’s just like a GPS.”

Interesting how the History Channel/Discovery Channel version doesn’t have some dumb wife.

Yes,the white male behind the counter is the dolt

It’s funny how you keep coming up with reasons why commercials that do actually feature dumb women somehow don’t count. The OP asked for commercials with “a woman being made to look idiotic”, not “a representative of the average woman being made to look idiotic and then being corrected by an intelligent man”.

What about the character Orlando Jones played in the 7-Up ads? (1999-2002 according to Wikipedia, so not that recent but not from the Jim Crow era or anything.) I’d say he was “comically stupid in a light hearted way”, and he definitely wasn’t playing the “husbuffoon” to a smarter female partner. His character was apparently in charge of 7-Up marketing and kept coming up with terrible ideas for promotions. He’s the one who cluelessly made t-shirts with the slogan “Make 7-Up Yours” that said “Make 7” on the front and “Up Yours” on the back. Here he is failing to say Merry Christmas in several languages.

Just saw a new one with her. It’s for a new air-freshener spray that’s motion activated. Of course, you wouldn’t want it spraying all the time, so there’s a 30-minute reset time when the motion sensor is deactivated.

How is this demonstrated? The husbuffoon is waving his hands in front of the thing like he’s trying to guide a 737 to a parking space. Label-on-her-ass woman comes to his rescue by pressing the button.

Sarc noted. But what this writer really was, was sneaky. Sneaky-ironic, maybe.

The name of the live person hubby is talking to is “Julie.”

“Julie” is the voice recognition system used to book tickets on Amtrak.

The credit card lady could have been Sarah or Jenny or Annie or Meg or anything with two syllables or less. But no. She’s Julie.

A note of honest cynicism perhaps?

King of Queens

(Sorry for the lame list, but I don’t watch sitcoms all that often. The three episodes I saw this past week had this (largely) as the theme.)

King of Queens is not on the air, and thus cannot be pointed to as an example of the current zeitgeist.