I am continually annoyed by the Oxy Clean commercials that show Billy Mays in the background silently pitching while his alive pal pitches in the foreground.
I also remember a commercial with Fred Astaire doing a dance routine with a… broom? …vacuum cleaner?
Can anyone think of other commercials with old live footage of dead people spliced in? I am not referring to actors portraying some old dead guy like Lincoln or Washington.
I found two on this page for Coors Lite. Don’t recall ever seeing them before. One of them has R Lee Ermy as a drill sergeant as well. Pretty good, actually.
I don’t mind the Oxy Clean ads because it’s actual footage of Billy doing a commercial. He sold Oxy Clean and now they are using his image to do the same. Showing a commercial that an actor/spokesperson made while he was alive after he died doesn’t bother me either.
What I do not like are the commercials where they take footage from movies or interviews and change their words or insert beer or a broom or whatever product. To me, that is creepy.
He had made it while he was alive but knew he was dying of lung cancer, specifically intending it to be aired after his death. So it’s not quite the same as commercials using footage from deceased actor’s movies to advertise products that didn’t even exist when they were alive.
A scene from the film Carry on Loving was used in an advert for Bounty kitchen towel. They used extras to film the scenes that weren’t in the original and then spliced them in - a friend of mine was Hattie Jacques’ legs. Most of the people in it are dead.
In the eighties I’m sure there was an advert that used scenes from Casablanca, but I can’t find it online now. It had a kid who was trying to romance a little girl who was. oddly, clearly about 8 to his 12.
Jim Varney’s picture as the Ernest character was used in print ads for a car dealership in California for years after his death. Later they did tv commercials with a CG version of the character with a bad sound-alike. I don’t know if they ever used footage of the live Ernest in the tv commercials though.
I recall Reebok running a print ad that showed a photo of James Dean wearing a pair of their sneakers. There was some kerfuffle raised about it at the time.