“Now more than ever” was used in Pres. Nixon’s reelection campaign. That’s what I always thought of…
not that that makes it a better slogan.
“Now more than ever” was used in Pres. Nixon’s reelection campaign. That’s what I always thought of…
not that that makes it a better slogan.
Ferries = fairies (homosexuals). Cruise. Heck, maybe even “straits” could be a play on words.
One of my mom’s favorite “jokes” when referring to the ferries in Washington State was “I didn’t know Liberace had a navy.” (She got better.)
There’s an ad playing for something (maybe a phone service) and the first lines of the jingle are "There’s nothing you can do that can’t be done, there’s nothing you can sing that can’t be sung . . . " It sounds to me like they’re saying anything you can do or sing has already been done or sung, so why bother?
[This referred to the earlier post "Then there was the great advertising campaign in British Columbia in the 80s, ‘Cruise the Straits with BC Ferries!’ "]
Something to do with cruising for straights, perhaps?
Those lines are from the Beatles’ “All You Need Is Love,” so it was a choice of a song to use rather than something that was written specifically for the ad.
It’s not a jingle… it’s Beatles song All You Need is Love
ETA: shakes fist at GaryT
Ferries = fairies (homosexuals)
Straits = straights (non-homosexuals)
Cruise = to go looking for sexual partners
Depending on one’s pronunciation, “Ferries” could = “Furries”…
Oh. ::embarrassed::
Those lines still don’t make sense to me.
Backstory: I work at the U.S. headquarters of a German company. It used to be a British company, but the German company acquired it 3 years ago. Since then, there have been huge amounts of layoffs and cutbacks and attempts to make things work in a more Germanic way, as well as lots of jobs and functions being relocated to Germany. Things have escalated lately, and everybody is feeling extremely pessimistic and grumbling about “the Germans.”
So I’m not saying this one was “astonishingly poorly conceived or executed” or anything but this article is making the rounds at work today, to much muffled hilarity. So I figured I’d throw it in the mix.
Aggressive, overpowering, and tyrannical? Hmm…
Hit and miss but you get a few visual howlers here at this site:
Not to mention the comma splice.
I wonder at pretty much all the Kraft ads - so very, very lame. I hope they aren’t paying their ad agency very much.
You got my interest piqued so I looked up a few analyses (sp?) of the lyrics. Here’s one:
Call me a cynic, but I don’t believe the advertisers were unaware of those connotations. In their “innocent” senses, the slogans are both vapid and contrived, but the “accidental” interpretations are much more meaningful and memorable.
Now this seems much more innocent. “Cruise,” “strait” and “ferry” are all common words that would logically appear in the company’s advertisements but happen to have other meanings that relate to each other in a smirk-inducing way.
These lyrics always made more sense to me in light of knowing something about Eastern philosphy, in that there’s nothing you can do by active effort which will bring enlightenment or happiness - i.e. nothing done through active effort can break you from your ego – it can oly be done through passive surrender of the ego, i.e “love”
(which allows you to “learn how to be you in time”).
Language like “There’s nothing you can know that isn’t known” is very typical in certain kinds of Indian and Buddhist literature.
As a caveat, I came to this interpretation while listening to the song on acid.
Any commercial for a food product which shows the food smeared on a person’s face is a fail to me. There’s some kind of Beefaroni commercial that shows a guy going “wild” for a can of Beefaroni and ending up passed out on his back in a tent with tomato sauce all over his face. Not appetizing at all.
Song choice b/c the tune is catchy, but they’re hoping no one thinks about the lyrics, always bugs me.
For example, Carnival Cruise lines using “Lust for Life” by Iggy Pop. Lovely how in the commcercial they go from “Here comes Johnny Yen again” straight into “I’ve got a lust for life,” helpfully leaving out the part about the liquor and drugs, and the flesh machines, and doing another striptease.
Or going back a few years, there was an ad for some SUV where they show up in the dark to rock climb, and use the headlights to illuminate the rock. They used the dreamy intro to the Velvet Underground song “Heroin.” Needless to say they cut it off before the chorus.
I’m just waiting for “She don’t mind, she don’t mind, she don’t mind…Talking Rain!”
The enraptured fellow in the upper right-hand corner of this page is featured prominently on billboards that I see on my way to work. Every time I see it, I can’t help but imagine that the “Upper Room” is an illicit upstairs area of a strip club or massage parlor where, by the looks of his expression, one might expect to have a humdinger of a good time.
They didn’t help themselves much this month by advertising their new sermon series, “Satan’s Dirty Little Secret,” in distractingly large letters (previously the ads made more effort to indicate in text that the Upper Room is a “spirit-filled church”) with an image our fellated friend set against a background of red and orange flames.
Or when they pick a song for a small portion of the lyrics, and ignore the rest of them. My favorite example of this is Philadelphia Cream Cheese (made in Chicago, incidentally) using “New York, New York” in its ads, just for the first line (“Start spreading the news”).
I agree that the Windows 7 ads are terrible, but especially because they give the impression that the dopes in Redmond couldn’t figure out that an OS shouldn’t be a piece of crap by themselves. Which may be true, but you don’t brag about it.