Hell, by the time a commercial is on, you’ve been paid already, right?
Having said that, I almost never watch TV. When I do, I’ll sometimes watch the commercials, especially if they’re for things that I’m actually interested in buying (video games or such) or they’re amusing. I mean, I love the Jog On, Kitties ad, though I have to watch it on YouTube.
And since I’m here, I guess I’ll fix the title, too.
Before reading other replies, I want to echo these sentiments – for the most part.
In those relatively rare situations when we’re watching something “live” (we try to watch DVR’ed things so we can FF through the commercials) I will mute as soon as the commercials start. In many cases I will look away as well, or leave the room.
However, every once in a while I will see one that piques my interest enough to turn off the mute and rewind the buffer to see and hear what it was about. If I had to guess at the percentage of commercials I have missed – aside from those shows at Super Bowl time when the “good” commercials are spotlighted – I’d feel very comfortable with 80% and it might be as high as 90%.
This, although someone monitoring my brain waves during the commercial might think I was just staring at the wall…until the miniature giraffe comes on!
Some commercials are worth watching as works of entertainment. There’s no genre of entertainment that doesn’t have some value in it.
Saying “I don’t watch any commercials” is like saying “I don’t watch any television” or “I don’t read any books” or “I don’t listen to any popular music” or “I don’t watch any black and white movies”. You’re just missing the good with the bad.
When I watch superbowl ads, I am usually at the store within minutes and making purchases: toothpaste, tampons (I’m a guy), beer I don’t like, hemorrhoid cream (I don’t even know what a hemorrhoid is!), veggie burgers.
I’ve added combination lock seat belts to my couch just to slow me down, sometimes, by the time I get the lock undone, the urge to purchase and consume has passed, so this setup seems to be working for me.
Sure, even though I skip through commericials with Tivo, one will catch my eye once in a while. The little piggy crying wheeeee, the woman breaking up with her boyfriend with a text message (but it’s ok because she has unlimited texts), and movie trailers.
I watch the ads for Bender and Bender law firm just in case it’s the one with the bald guy who puts on a cowboy hat. It leaves both of us weak from laughter because it’s just so stoooooooooooooooooopid.
I appreciate good commercials.
Yes, the majority suck. The majority of everything sucks. But there are truly good commercials out there. Yes, they’re trying to sell me stuff. I know that and I’m ok with it. Quite frankly, if they entertain me enough, I feel they deserve my money. I consciously buy products based on the fact they have better 30-second spots than their competitors do. I want to encourage companies to use their advertising dollars well.
The thing is, in some media, the bad outweighs the good by so much that the chances of coming across something good is vanishingly slight. Rather than ferret out the needles of good in the haystacks of bad, I’ll go and enjoy some other entertainment, which is more likely to actually entertain me. I mean, the only value in most commercials is being able to mock them later for their epic amounts of fail.
You all know that if God had wanted us to watch commercials He wouldn’t have allowed the remote to have been invented.
I haven’t voluntarily watched a commercial in years - a book is always handy, or some interesting surfing is available. However, one of the things that really frosts me about commercials is that, even if they are muted during the broadcast of a movie, they cut up the movie so bady that it becomes unwatchable. So I never watch movies on TV except for one channel which broadcasts without commercials.
They are so insidious that it is impossible to watch and enjoy the funny ones without becoming part of the evil capitalist consumer machine.
This is the same reason I stopped reading books also - there is usually an ad for other books by the same author - no way I’m getting caught up in that.
Typically in the evening I sit motionless in a completely white room with only a candle and I contemplate my very existence.
You only have those white walls because the paint industry has conditioned you to see white walls as normal. Look around in nature, do you see white walls. No you do not. Wake up sheeple.
I absolutely watch the commercials. Sometimes they even work. Reminding people of stuff they like to purchase is a perfectly cromulent function of TV time. Some of them are very entertaining. Some of them are so bad as to make me want to avoid the product out of spite.
I understand the feelings about having a program interrupted but it’s part of the cost of getting to watch a show for free. I find it somewhat disturbing that people feel compelled to ignore them out of a sense of entitlement.
In one seemingly simple post, the very foundation of my entire world view has been crashed upon the rocks below and I now, in a vain attempt to keep my sanity, twist and contort every experience I have had so that my rationalizations intersect in a meaningful way.
If only I watched TV, I’m sure there would be a product that could help me in my time of need.
No. I don’t watch commercials. For the most part, I DVR things and then fast-forward through the commercials. If I’m out of DVRed programming then I’ll pause the program and then come back a little while later when there is enough buffered to fast-forward through the commecials. On the occasion when I’m watching one of the other TVs in my house that doesn’t have a DVR, I’ll flip back and forth between two shows to avoid watching commercials. If the commercials for the two shows start to overlap, I’ll find another show to add to the rotation. If it gets to be too much work to avoid the commercials, I’ll get up and go do something else. I hate commercials. I figure I’m wasting enough time just watching TV, I’m sure not going to make the time even less valuable by watching commercials.