Oh, sure. The burger’s 100% beef. It’s just everything else on top and underneath it that’s made from sugar, salt, fat, ground kittens and orphans’ tears.
The linked commercial is a remake of an 80s-era Folgers ad that depicted the older brother coming home and being greeted by a really little sister. Cute. The new commercial made the brother a touch younger and the sister a lot older; that, combined with the delivery of the lines, gives the whole thing a bit of an incest vibe to some people.
:smack:it took me all day to figure this out:o
Head on! got a head ache? Use our ineffective pain reliever
Head on! got a head ache? Use our ineffective pain reliever
Head on! got a head ache? Use our ineffective pain reliever
Head on! got a head ache? Use our ineffective pain reliever
Head on! got a head ache? Use our ineffective pain reliever
Head on! got a head ache? Use our ineffective pain reliever
Head on! got a head ache? Use our ineffective pain reliever
Head on! got a head ache? Use our ineffective pain reliever
Head on! got a head ache? Use our ineffective pain reliever
Head on! got a head ache? Use our ineffective pain reliever
Head on! got a head ache? Use our ineffective pain reliever
Head on! got a head ache? Use our ineffective pain reliever
If I have to use it this many times for one headache, then it’s not working good enough for me to waste time with.
as an aside, am I the only one that wants to punch Jimmy in the throat instead of buying a syphilis or whatever it is he’s shilling?
A few years back the was a commercial for pop tarts that used CGI to create a boy so happy that his mother was making him pop tarts that he begins to dance around the kitchen. One of his dance moves was the moonwalk.
So Kellogg’s just linked a product aimed a kids with Michael Jackson.
+1 Hate that commercial.
There’s a thread about this topic somewhere.
As near as I can tell, Liberty Mutual insurance is looking for customers with no understanding of how insurance works, and Jack Link’s beef jerky is for people who are complete and total assholes.
And she’ll probably end up on one of the Liberty Mutual commercials whining about how her mean ol’ insurance company won’t give her a brand new car, a million dollars, and a puppy, because apparently the point of auto insurance is to reward you for driving like a lunatic.
I think that actor just comes across as pathetic, the pinnacle of his career was being the “can you hear me now guy” and he’s still clinging to it.
I was always under the impression one could go to any school yard and purchase as much marijuana as he wanted from any school kid. (The hardest part would be going to the school yard - maybe as school lets out?) We supposedly have medical m.j. here, and it’s supposedly very expensive and very hard to get a prescription for. Whereas, a young person of my acquaintance assures me if I ever need some for cancer or whatever, they can get me as much as I want - ‘it’s everywhere!’.
The latest Sonic commercial where the guy complains that “owning a smart phone hasn’t made him any smarter”. Then he tries to drink his milkshake through the cherry stem.
Oh yeah, I want to eat where this guy eats:dubious:
I hated this commercial with the fire of a thousand suns. it basically says “you may suck at being a dad, so at least you can hand him down a VW later.”
you know how many kids would love to have a dad who pays attention enough to do things like play catch with them, even if badly? Nope, VW thinks it’s better to give him a car which will be a used up, money pit piece of junk by the time he’s old enough to drive it.
I had a friend who, in the 1980’s, became obsessed with cigarette ads, which he claimed were full of death symbology. He had a collection of print ads that he had saved. (This friend, BTW, never smoked tobacco, but he had several other much worse bad-health habits.)
One ad he showed me portrayed a cigarette carton which, he claimed, was drawn to look something like a coffin. (I couldn’t see the coffin in it.)
Another ad showed the Marlboro Man, standing on the prairie, staring vacantly off into the distance. Even I could see the problem with that.
My friend’s premise was that there was nothing unintentional about it.
Best thing is the first YouTube comment:
lol
Honestly, I find commercials with meaning, however unintended their messages, somewhat refreshing. I don’t see many ads these days, but when I do, my general response is ''WTF was that?" Because they really don’t even seem to make sense these days.
It’s the “made with” that gets me, and probably Donegal Dragon. Burger King chicken fries advertise “made with white meat chicken” but leave out of the ad the starch, water, and whatever else, they toss in there. Not 100% white meat chicken at all.
Along the same lines, one of the buttery spreads- maybe Country Crock?- uses “real ingredients.” No shit, everything in there is real? Doesn’t say anything about real what…
Another one that still makes me wonder what the hell they were thinking:
Cialis decided to make, as their PRIMARY ICONIC IMAGE, a scene of two older adults, out in the country side somewhere, naked (we assume), sitting in side by side bathtubs.
What is it about taking Cialis, that makes it necessary to remain forever in a bathtub, outside where the wind can keep the air fresh, carefully separated from your spouse? Is this some rather gross disagreeable side effect they don’t want us to know ahead of time?
This new AP called “Letgo” has rather nasty ads, too.
They have yet to have had one where the person who actually OWNED the whatever, WANTED TO SELL IT. Someone else always sold it out from under them, without their permission.
Another ad agency noticed this. At least it placed the couple in the same hot tub.
With modern phones, you should be able to use your home wifi for cell calls at home.
I could never buy a Chevy Cruz after one of the ‘real people’ in their ad refers to the car as, essentially, a mulletmobile.