Verizon has just entered the Stupid Commercial Hall of Fame

Ya know something? I like the Verizon Guy. “Can you hear me now?..Can you hear me now?” Over and over, all over the place, never tiring. Like the Energizer Bunny with a cell phone, you never know where he’ll wind up.

Except…in the current commercial, he runs across a pit viper (looks like a rattlesnake) reared and ready to strike. He takes a pic on the videophone and sends it to somebody, who replies back, “NOT POISONOUS.” Ahem?? A non-poisonous pit viper? No such f*cking thing!!

Then, he steps over it, passing it by mere inches…RIGHT THROUGH the “Kill Zone”, where a small-brained reptile would instinctively strike at a threat. All this without a “Do Not Attempt” warning. I smell a lawsuit in the planning stages…

Well, ya know, pit vipers are not poisonous. I don’t think it would hurt you to badly if you bit one. They are, however, quite venomous, and would definitely hurt you, should it decide to reciprocate…

Yes, it is a stupid commercial, and the bad thing is, lots of people will see that commercial and say, “Huh, I always thought those things were dangerous”, thus throwing caution to the wind.

Of course, it could be argued that anyone who takes advice about potentially dangerous reptiles from a cell phone commercial has no one to blame but themself if they are bitten.

I was hoping this was a creative way for verizon to get rid of the “can you hear me now” guy. They could have a closing line like “Getting advice is now even easier, just make sure you get it from the right person!”

I really don’t think people are going to be playing with pit vipers anytime soon just because of a commercial.

Rather than making sure they have a proper signal in Pit-Viper Land, or in the Antarctic, or on a submarine trolling the depths of the Indian Ocean, or wherever - how about %&*(#&$ing making sure I can get a goddamn signal at my own house, in the suburbs of Hartford, CT.

Verizon’s a joke.

/hijack

Funny, I thought the very first “Can you hear me now?” ad put them in that particular Hall of Fame.

I haven’t seen the commercial. Are you sure it wasn’t something like a gopher snake, which is non-venomous and is often mistaken for a rattlesnake?

And if they do that’s ok, the gene pool could always use some cleansing.

You wouldn’t think so, but there was that guy that tried to collect on the Harrier with the Pepsi Points.

Hmm, I did some Google searching on gopher snakes, and you may be right. It sure looked like a genuine rattler, though. And it’s still one hell of an annoying commercial, so there. :slight_smile:

Yup. The commercial is plugging the fact that not only can you send pictures, you can attach sound clips to them. So Canyouhearmenow guy recorded the menacing rattle sound to send along with the photo, to which he got the ‘Not poisonous’ reply. Gopher snakes don’t rattle, do they?

[hijack]

Speaking of dumb commercials, am I the only annoyed by those ads for the sexual potency drug (can’t recall the name) featuring the guy with the creepy frozen smile and his f’ugly wife?

No, you’re not the only one Fibber. I was absolutely convinced that that commercial was a joke until I realized that I wasn’t watching SNL…There’s still a part of my brain that refuses to believe it’s real.

Actually, they can. Sort of. They don’t have rattles, but they can mimic the sound of a rattlesnake by vibrating the end of their tail very quickly in dry grass or leaves.

Cite

and

Cite .

I agree that the commercial sounds stupid, though. I wouldn’t take the risk of being bitten by a possible rattler based on the opinion of someone who is observing said snake over a cell phone. Also, non-venomous snakes can bite and may do so if they feel sufficiently threatened. Who wants to get bit, even if it’s not life threatening? I’ve had many close encounters with snakes outdoors, though, (including rattlesnakes) and most of them just want to be left alone and will try their best to get away from you rather than bite you.

I don’t believe I have ever seen a gopher snake with the broad head and keeled scales of the snake in the commercial. I think it is a light coloured Western Rattlesnake, and the spokesmoron should have given it a wide berth.

I was rooting for the snake, so I found the commercial a grave disappointment.

Hey, gotta give the guy credit - he did gather up enough points. Too bad the guys at Pepsi decided to stiff him. (Not that I imagine they had much of a choice in the matter, but still.)