Sunday, December 4, 2011

Canada Dry - inventing a market for their product

Imagine a world where Girl Scout cookies are made from real girl scouts, and ginger ale was made from  real ginger.
Not THIS type of ginger. Although that does solve some problems in the world...

Canada Dry has made the latter the truth. Their ginger ale is made from real ginger! Great...who cares. I mean, seriously, who likes ginger ale?

Well, Canada Dry has taken a page from the pharmaceutical companies as they attempt to invent a market for their product. Think about it, the med companies do it all the time. Seriously, there is no way we'd survive as a species let alone be at the top of the food chain if at least half of us were so messed up that we truly needed prescription meds to keep us going.  Anyway, this blog isn't about the stupidity of pharmaceutical ads...I've already covered that. This is about Canada Dry.

You may have seen the ad. It premiered several months ago, and they recently brought it back during the Holiday season, because apparently the "working up a sweat in the field" thing they have going on on the ad rings true during the holiday season. Watch.


The ad starts with  a group of people who do not look like any farm worker I see out here working the many fields of the San Joaquin valley harvesting, of all things, ginger. As they work, one farmer yanks on a plant and out pops a bottle of ginger ale. Then another yanks out a vending machine full of the stuff. 
 
I'll even refrain from commenting on the silliness of pulling out cans and a vending machine. The stupidest thing of this ad is the assertion that nothing hits the spot when you're hot, sweaty and thirsty, as a nice can of ginger ale. 

Really?

 This baby just tried ginger ale for the first time. 


For some reason, when I've worked up a truly vicious thirst making fun of commercials, ginger ale doesn't come to mind as something to quench that thirst. I guess I can't begrudge them for trying to expand past the normal market: mixed drinks and old people who remember prohibition when they drank ginger ale.
 
Somehow, I just don't see it catching on when there supermarket shelves filled with drinks, healthy and unhealthy, that quench your thirst without tasting like ass. 

Saturday, December 3, 2011

A holiday tradition...of creepiness and bad parenting: Campbells Soup Winter Commercial

I am no doubt the first to tell you it's Christmas time and as such, we will be bombarded by a ceaseless parade of advertisements meant to play on our love of the season and spending unsustainable amounts of money to make sure the Christmas spirit of crippling debt is left alive.

What, too cynical?

Some commercials have been around for so long they play not just on our need to get the best gadget for Christmas, but also our sense of nostalgia. Enter Campbell's Soup.


I used to love that commercial, because seeing it I knew it was Christmas time. When I was a bit older, I love it because I knew it meant it was winter time, and when you live in the desert like I did, winter time means you can now touch your car door handle without needing skin grafts afterward.

But now, I realize this commercial displays not only a level of creepiness, but of some questionable parenting at best.

First off, let's look at the opening scene.


I recognize that this commercial was filmed some time ago...so long ago they probably actually used film. But it wasn't produced so long ago that letting your kid play outside unattended was necessarily considered great parenting. Especially in a fricking blizzard.

But I don't think the kid was playing in the snow...I think he was left outside to serve as his parents' outdoor decoration. He was just standing there, covered in snow, until he apparently received a union-mandated soup break.

Then things just get weird. Not that a walking snowman outside of the Frosty cartoon isn't weird. But take a look at this:
I'll concede that the poor kid standing out there for hours could end up covered in snow and resemble a snowman. But, how the hell did his arms turn to sticks? Apparently his parents aren't just shitty, there is some sort of fairytale evil stepmom and warlock thing going on.

But by the power of Campbells condensed soup, the spell is lifted (or the snow melts, if you take it at face value, you poor fool) and we see....AAAH! A GINGER!

Maybe the parents weren't evil, he was sentenced to snowman for his crimes of being a ginger. And looks what happens when he's released from his icy cell:

Yeah, you see a smiling kid. I see someone who just ate a bowl of Chicken Noodle and Soul Soup. That's right, the little sucker just took someone's soul and made it in to a rich, savory broth. Cambell's Soup is worse than Soylent Green...it's PEOPLE.....'s souls.

Or I'm just reaching. I DO love their soup...

Friday, September 30, 2011

This is really happening Fresno!

So if you're like me and live in the Fresno and Bakersfield broadcast areas you've been privileged to see this gem of an ad. Constantly. In-effing-cessantly. Ad nauseum...pun intended.Seriously, it's generally played at least twice every commercial break it's in. Even if I was interested in the product, that would just turn me the hell off.


First off, let me stress that's the second version of the ad. The initial ad said "The I-99, it's your time." That's great, I was wondering when our time was. The only problem is, the 99 isn't an Interstate; it's a US Highway. A minor difference, but when you're hyping that you're doing a big thing for an area, something like the major highway is something you may want to get right.

They've since edited the "I" out of the spot, which only makes me focus more on the other issues.

Issues like this guy...he is just WAY too excited about a Doritos taco shell
He's turned on by cheese-dust covered fingers. Sadly, not even in the top 100 of weird shit you'll find online. And somehow I get the impression he's doing a version of the old "cut a hole in the bottom of the popcorn bucket" trick. 


Anyway, I'll overlook all the lame jokes and bad puns; Lord knows I make enough of those myself (see first paragraph) but the one thing that just makes me shake my head is at the very end. He talks about the taco and confirms that no, this isn't a dream of another way to make your digestive tract loathe you even more, "This is Really Happening!"

That's right, this is really happening! A solution to all our problems. Unless you count crippling unemployment, high crime rateswater crisis in the farming community as our problems. But hey, Taco Bell in a Doritos shell! I mean, what else could you need.

Maybe a job so you could afford one I guess...

Monday, September 19, 2011

I can't stop watching this commercial...damn Kia hamsters

Last year, also-ran automaker Kia came out with a new car, the Soul, and a new commercial showing head bobbing hamsters driving the compact conveyance. Since then the hamsters have been rapping and now, dancing in the most addicting freaking ad I have seen.

Hamsters!


I honestly can't help myself, I can not stop watching this damn commercial. The annoying music drills into my brain and lays eggs or something like one of those zombie mold things.

It opens up like the beginning of some video game that, honestly, I would totally play. Some massive laser firing robots are doing battle with Master Chief clones in the remains of a great city somewhere that Hamsters have taken bipedal human form as if it were some sort of furry pet version of Planet of the Apes.

Wait....are they hamsters or guinea pigs? Not sure, but either way, Richard Gere loves this commercial too.

Anyway, just as one of the Master Chiefs (Masters Chief? ooh...grammar jokes) is about to meet its untimely death at the hands of the Super Death Robot thing, when the three hamsters roll up in their Kia Soul.

Hamsters!

The battle is immediately interrupted as the fighting factions are distracted by the rhythmic moves of the dancing Hamsters. Peace ensues, not to mention a space Marine/robot thing showing off some good moves.

                                                       Coming in 2012: Street Dance 2115

Seriously though, I haven't seen a robot fighter thing move his pelvis like that since I was killed by some 12 year old punk playing Halo online and he teabagged my dead character. I then promptly canceled my Xbox Live account. Effing kids...



                                                                    Hamsters, dammit!

So the sci-fi fighting force dance on as the hamsters drive out of town. Do they keep dancing in the pets' absence, or does the fighting resume. Who knows for sure, but the skies did seem a bit brighter as they left. Maybe we can learn something from these rhythmic rodents ...maybe we don't have to fight, but can solve our problems by getting down to catchy music performed by douche bags. All I know is, I feel better after watching the commercial. 


                                                            Did I mention the hamsters?

Sunday, June 26, 2011

Encouragement....to be a better parent maybe

Before I  go in to this, I will say that I absolutely love this commercial. But that doesn't mean there aren't some things that we can't address. (Translation: make fun of)



I'm assuming you've seen the ad. Some parents dragged their little boy to a piano recital, because everyone knows that's the place to take a hyperactive demographic. The commercial opens up to shitty parenting as we look for the answer to the question: "It's 7 o'clock, do you know where your child is?

Oh I'm sorry, I was too busy being self centered to keep an eye on him. You?
We're further exposed to their horrible parenting skills when the kid goes where he's not supposed to. I'm not saying I was a perfect kid, Lord knows I was incapable of shutting the hell up. (Big shock, I know.) But I would NOT have gone somewhere I was obviously not supposed to go. This kid apparently wanders like the big guy from Cadence

I wonder if there are any Legos in there . . .
Before the parents decide if they should get up and look for their lost little ankle-biter or pick out swatches to turn his room back in to a study, they hear the unmistakable staccato of a little boy making expensive piano keys all sticky, since kids are dirty.  That's right, the kid is pecking at the keys like our grandparents type, barely playing Twinkle Twinkle Little Star. Or the alphabet tune...but since the kid couldn't read the sign saying stay the hell out, I'm guessing its the former versus the latter. So the parents think, Uh-oh, now we'll surely be embarrassed! It can't get any worse than this, can it?
Hey, I was gonna play some piano, but who wants to watch me punt a kid instead?
   
But instead of holding the kid up by the scruff of the neck and asking "Who's is this? He's going in the lost and found!" the piano player joins in with the kid and performs a rendition of Twinkle Twinkle that makes the kid a little star. (See what I did there? ) This is actually really cool, and hopefully the kid about which this commercial is based did venture off in to a career in music. After finding better parents, of course.

This commercial is just like anything else form Hollywood;  we rarely see the negative repercussions of noble or heroic acts. This commercial is no different, as it cuts out before we get to see one which parent lost the game of Rock Paper Scissors and had to go pick up their kid. 

onetwothree NOT IT!
We could take it to another step and show the kid later on, a musician himself. He cold point to his parents in the audience and say "My career in music, and my fame, are all thanks to my parents, and their inability to keep track of one kid!
Thanks, Son. 
So we'll just assume that everything ended well. The parents didn't later leave him home when going on vacation resulting in the little blond kid foiling robbers with ridiculous hi-jinks,  and he went on to a great career in music.

In closing...I just wanted to say SCREW YOU to these guys for making me cry every time this commercial comes on television:

It's not connected, I know. But it needed to be said. *Grabs a kleenex*

 


Saturday, June 25, 2011

Zoosk: What the bloody hell!?

In this day and age of the Internet, we're more connected via social media and what not, but somehow fail to make meaningful connections. Thanks to that, we have an ever growing number of online dating services promising to hook you up through some sort of online chicanery...I mean match-making. And they're everywhere. I'm not kidding, since I've written this, I've seen ads for three different dating sites...and four pizza delivery companies. Apparently I fit in to a viewing demographic of hungry, lonely losers.

Forever alone pizza...never has a meme been more appropriate in food form.

Remember when we used to go to a bar or nightclub to meet  a mate? Me neither, I'm married to the girl I went out with in high school. But I'm told that's how it was done. Now we log on to sites like facebook to get poked, and there's just something wrong with that. Add in that impersonal approach to dating,  and we have examples of what's wrong with our society.

There's e-Harmony, which talks about some ridiculous number of traits that they put in to some sort of mathematical formula to find you the perfect match. Because that's what was missing in the institution of marriage, scientifically formulated equations. Nothing says I love you like a theorem. Pythagoras was HOT!

E-Harmony's guy looks like his graphing calculator was his first love.
But the worst offender is the latest example of our materialism and nature shallower than a kiddie pool in the Sahara: Zoosk. The first commercial I saw for Zoosk had a woman and her three friends drooling like Pavlovian dogs over some male models zoosk shows to be their dating fodder.


First off, what horrible labeling. Serious romance? Just because you have enough candles to warrant a visit from the fire marshal doesn't make it romantic. You're looking to get shtupped. (Is that the correct spelling? I don't know Yiddish, and I didn't want to say "fucked". Ooops...) That's fine, I don't agree with the whole men can screw anyone and it's fine and a woman who does it is a whore double standard. It takes two to tango. But call it like it is princess. 

Second, we constantly hear about the magazine images of women being too skinny making women do stupid ass shit to be that horrifically skinny First off, who likes these sticks? If men liked twigs, then why isn't that what you see in porn? Not that I've ever seen one....  But what about the reverse? Where's the outrage over men having to look like 'roided up meatheads to be worth dating? 

The latest ad though is even dumber, which I found rather surprising considering how lowly the bar was set.

I really hope one of the people standing outside that office after their less than subtle romp in the paper tray (huh huh...talk about a paper jam) is from HR to fire their freshly-tapped asses. But judging from the reactions, I'm guessing they work for Voyeur Incporporated. You've got a dorky looking guy saying "Aloha" in a "funny" way. Aloha? Really? I guess the commercial's stupidity is evidence enough of a lack of writing staff, but they couldn't come up with anything funnier than aloha? Here, I'll pitch three lines off the top of my head better than aloha.

1) That's one way of filling an opening.
2) Well that's one way of making copies.
3) The intern program has never been the same since we brought in Clinton.


So the girl who apparently had the office romance comes back from the cut scene and says she'll "Stick to Zoosk for dating." Right...sorry you kinky little minx, but I somehow doubt sticking to Zoosk will prevent your inner exhibitionist coming rearing it's ugly head. You'll just do it at places other than work. 

Aloha...now go get lei-ed.

Saturday, May 14, 2011

It was inevitable: The Charmin Bears

The Charmin Bears.....sigh. Or as I call them, the Dinglebearies.

I hate these ads.

I have hated these ads since they first brought them out a few years ago. Remember the great ads of yesteryear, Mr. Whipple saying "Don't squeeze the Charmin?" I don't either, I'm not 80. But I am aware of them as they are among the  most iconic ads in the history of television informing us of just what we need to buy to make our lives complete.

Now, we have bears who A)Answer our question about what bears do in the woods and B) apparently have wiping problems. Do we really need to see this?


I'm no prude, don't get me wrong. But for some reason, commercials talking about "pieces left behind" just really seems to be more than we really need to hear about. But oh, television is a visual medium. So we're treated to not just dirty pieces of toilet paper stuck to this bears ass, but a wonderful acrobatic display of the bear either looking to see that he's clean or on a voyage of self discovery. It's natural, but that's supposed to be done in a bathroom with a door that locks.

She knows what you're doing in there.

The most disturbing part of this commercial comes six seconds in: "You can't pass inspection with pieces left behind." Um, what? Inspection? What kind of messed up mother not only puts their kids up for inspection, but also checks the kids butt? That's an inspection that'd even make R. Lee. Ermey blush. 


You want me to check WHERE!? That stuff about a golf ball through a garden hose was spot on, wasn't it?

If your morning routine includes the phrase "spread 'em" and you're not in prison, I'm pretty sure it's time to call a crisis line. If mom is keeping an eye on your brown eye, there are going to be some serious therapy bills in the future.  

Or, maybe the folks at Charmin's ad company are furries, and this is a way to pass secret messages on to other furries. If you don't know what furries are, do yourself a favor and don't ask. I won't be held responsible for google exposing you to a whole new world of warped fetishes. 

Anyway, we're told that only through the strength of Charmin can stand up to our apparently razor-blade lined arseholes so we can pass inspection from our anal (literally and figuratively) mothers. 

Seriously, she's giving her kids ass a thumbs up...why am I the only one concerned? Although it wold be worse if a few of those letters in the previous sentence we rearranged....


Thanks to the strength of Charmin's diamond-weave technology (technology in toilet paper? Really?) Charmin can apparently withstand a three pound turd. Seriously, if you're dropping bombs that weigh three pounds, toilet paper leaving pieces behind probably isn't your biggest problem. You should be more worried about pieces of  colon being left behind. 



Truth in advertising: The REAL miracle

Miracle Whip has broken the cardinal rule of advertising. Granted, they're used to breaking cardinal rules. The first one they broke is "Don't make a condiment that tastes like shit." This latest flouting of standard rules is "Don't say anything negative about the product you're advertising." Watch this ad.


Finally! A commercial with honesty! Granted, there are still some lies in there. I mean, who actually does like Miracle Whip? I remember vividly the last time I ate Miracle Whip. It was by accident. I took a bite of a sandwich and thought the mayo had gone bad. Then I realized it was Miracle Whip and had wished it was mayo that had gone bad.

In all honesty, I do like the commercials. It takes some juevos...big, smelly, rotten juevos used to make Miracle Whip, to make a commercial denigrating the very product you wish to promote. I think that says something about us as consumers. We've gotten to the point that we can see through the bullshit that convinced people to buy cigarettes in the 50's.

And candy. I would recommend lots and lots of candy.Ka-ching!

Apparently we're more sophisticated than our predilection for shows like Jersey Shore would indicate. We appreciate honesty, and admitting the truth. We also appreciate thinly veiled double entendres.


Wow. Just wow. That was blatant. I haven't seen an add so suggestive since I've watched Go Daddy try to get stuff approved for the Super Bowl. With the complete paranoia our nation has in terms of anything sexual, especially since we got a microsecond glimpse of Janet Jackson's mangled tit, I can only imagine the look on the censor's face when he or she saw this ad.

 Yeah, something like this. 


Saturday, April 9, 2011

Pharmacy companies: Smart research departments, dumb marketing departments

Sometimes I wonder if there is a quota at big companies.

Not racial. Oh hell no, I'm not touching that one on this lighthearted blog where I make fun of the marketing work of others. I mean in terms of IQ. I wonder if for every brilliant person the company has, they have to employ a complete moron just to keep from having to pay some intelligence tax.

Or maybe the idiot lobby wants to ensure that dolts get jobs too. That's the only reason I can come up with the sheer stupidity of the ads that come from pharmacy companies. As smart as the researchers who come up with chemical compounds that (theoretically) make us better must be, the marketing teams apparently all ride a short bus to work each morning. The costs for helmets alone explains why meds are so expensive.

Sometimes it's just a ridiculously shaky premise to tie everything in together. And by tie, I mean make you wonder "What the hell did that have to do with anything?"

Take this ad for Crestor for example.


Really? You tie in meeting the man you marry and the coming of your kids with your consumption of fatty foods littering your arteries with sludge like the beaches of the Gulf Coast? (What, too soon?) She's a real romantic, I'd love to read her anniversary cards.

Roses are red, violets are blue.
I got the clap on a business trip,
and now I gave it to you.

That's not the only one with a premise more shaky than the ground in Japan. (Yes, that was definitely too soon. My bad.) It's another cholesterol medication, unfortunately I can't find it on Youtube. Apparently it's so bad no one wants to remember it, but you may have seen it. There is a guy standing on a bridge over a frozen river with sign indicating the ice is perilously thin. Then he starts talking about when he was younger, he couldn't wait to get out on that ice. But then his doctor told him he was on thin ice with his cholesterol. Holy crap, that ice isn't the only "thin" thing in the ad...that premise is so thin Sally Struthers was going to beg for food for it.

Then you've got birth control ads. I get they're trying to be creative while also putting forth a lot of important information, 90 percent of which is side effects. But it just seems to me that the commercials are made by people who have never really had a conversation in their lives. People don't talk like this. (Skip to 25 seconds.)

Then she throws out "Tell your doctor if you have conditions like cardiovascular disease or inflammatory disease." Really? Here's a better thought. If your doctor doesn't know you have some major disease, maybe it's time you find a new doctor. Considering it's probably your doctor who diagnosed you with said life-threatening condition. What do they carry around those charts for?

While we're on birth control (HA!) commercials, we can't forget about the Nuva Ring fiasco. Really? One pill a day is just too much to bear? Really? If you can't find the time to swallow a little pill each day, I'm curious how you have the time to actually NEED the pill, if you know what I mean. wink wink, nod nod.

As bad as that one is, they follow it up with this one, trying to convince us the first commercial didn't suck. Calling that a train wreck would be an insult to train wrecks everywhere.

The one that I had to laugh at the most lately though is this ad for Claritin. Am I the only really doubting her perception of just how instrumental she is?


"Alright, let's move on team"
"In case you didn't notice, perky bitch, we're already moving on. See, we're walking with you. Lay off the meth!"


Apparently I am the only one doubting just how important she is. Skip to 17 seconds. The guy who is apparently so dumb I think he writes ads for pharmacy companies loses his step on a bridge that, to his credit, obviously does not meet Department of Transportation regulations. PB as I'm now calling her, looks back and says the very helpful "Watch your step!" The guy's response? "I couldn't have done it without you." Wow...I had no idea the seemingly obvious direction of "Watch where you're going on a rickety bridge or you'll fall to a horrible death like the guys in Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom." was so instrumental.

"If only Mola Ram had PB around to save his ass from death by falling in to a river full of hungry crocs."

As I look for a logical conclusion to what has turned in to more of a rant than anything else, a startling thought occurred to me. What if it's not that the marketing departments are dumb, but that they are advertising to people who are. That's a scary thought...a legion of doped up dumb people voting. Wow...a whole lot of things just made sense to me now. It's all...Claritin Clear.

Thursday, March 24, 2011

Inappropriate moment over coffee

Since it's beginning to a look a lot like Christmas at my house with the endless snow, I figure I'd go back in time to Christmas of 2010 with this ad critique.

Christmas is a magical time of peace, love and family togetherness. Sometimes, apparently a little too much "togetherness."

Watch this

Holy inappropriate behavior, what the hell was that!? I haven't seen such an unhealthy moment of sibling sexual tension since Empire Strikes Back. All I can say is I'm thankful the guy who made this glimpse in to West Virginian coffee habits didn't have her unwrap her "Christmas Present."

Merry Christmas, I got you an awkward moment.

If for whatever reason you didn't watch the video, let me fill you in. The brother is back from peace corps or something in Africa. After he hands her a box that I can only assume contains some sort of African sex toy, she takes the bow off the present and puts it on her brother, saying "You're my present this year."

That's a little odd, but maybe they're just close. Then you see the look they share. I've seen less restrained sexual magnetism in adult movies. How did the people making this commercial not see this? Maybe they needed to drink some of that coffee...'

It's at this point that mom wakes up from the smell of coffee (or sex and candy) and comes rushing out just in time to stop a crime against nature. Only one thing isn't harder than trying to figure out how they missed the subtext...

Hope that hug isn't too tight, or mom's gonna get a second surprise.

Sunday, March 20, 2011

The Perfect Situp

I was writing my last entry when I just saw this ad for the first time:

The Perfect Situp.

Really?

REALLY!?

Do people really pay for this stuff? Why do you need a goofy machine to lift your feet while you do a sit up? Why can't you just do that on your own?

Oh, there's an audible sound that tells you when you're doing the exercise correctly. Funny, I just thought that audible sound was my spine popping. Or maybe the distant laughter of these people who sold this device to "another idiot." Either way, I'm quite capable of making sounds when doing a crunch without the help of an expensive product.


Do you know how hard it is to not make a "fart" joke here? Keeping it classy.


They say a fool is born every minute, and a fool and his money are soon parted. So it's no surprise that industries have popped up taking advantage of those two statements. Why are we rushing out to buy this machine? Well, we as in someone else. Certainly not me. Oh, it was invented by a Navy seal. Hey, that must mean it's worth it. The guy who is fit and can kill you fifty ways with a spork made this. That either means A)He knows his stuff when it comes to sit ups or B)It's a thinly veiled threat that unless my fat ass buys this thing now, a team of highly trained military assassins will bust in and water board me until I buy one.

This brings up another point...why are we so impressed by products invented by people who wouldn't normally invent things? Do we have an innate distrust of scientists, or are we just supposed to be ecstatic that a teacher invented Airborne? Don't get me wrong, I have the utmost respect for teachers, but I'm not necessarily ready to buy a medical product because it was invented by some lady who was sick of dealing with snot-nosed kids (literally in this case) and made up a tablet versus some guys who went to college for this kind of stuff doing so in a lab.

But seriously, why would I buy this? Why can't I just lift my legs when doing some crunches and get those hard to reach lower abs by myself? Oh...

A university study says it's 180 percent better. Granted, they don't say what university, but hey, universities never lie about anything. Nor do commercials. I definitely need one of these.

Hell, I need one for every room, so no matter where I'm not working out, I can see it sitting in the corner collecting dust, and I can add fiscal irresponsibility guilt to my regular not-working-out guilt.

Whatever happened to truth in advertising

*Let me preface this entry with a disclaimer. I am biased in favor of the product denigrated in this commercial versus the product promoted. Why? I've been using said product for about 12 years.

Whatever happened to truth in advertising?

I'd like to think that as a society we've advanced far enough to at least take advertising with a grain of salt, if not look at it with a critical eye. Granted, this is the same society that somehow manages to watch a bunch of guidos prance around showing their abs and just acting so much like douchebags that Massengil is threatening a lawsuit. [citation needed]

Now I'm not saying those idiots have more product on their heads than brains in it...wait, that's exactly what I'm saying. However, I don't criticize television shows on this blog (all two posts, counting this one). I critique the ads that pay for those shows. So let's look at one touting the next greatest way to watch the glowing box to which I owe so much gratitude.

Watch an ad.

I can't find the one I've been seeing lately, but they still make the same claim: if it rains or snows, you lose your signal. Interesting. Well, right now, it's raining so hard and has been for so long that I've got animals beginning to line up in gender-specific pairs in my yard. I was going to build an ark, but got distracted when I was googling just what exactly a "cubit" is. (I ended up finding a site where I could play QBert and spent many hours on a nostalgia kick. Oops. Hope no one was really that fond of zebras. How long can I drag out this joke?)

Throughout all this nasty weather, I haven't lost my signal once. Living now in the mountains and before in the desert where it doesn't rain much, but when it does, it's a deluge, I have yet to lose signal because of rain. Light drizzles, fog and mist, torrential downpours accompanied by fierce winds that made me think the house was going to fly away, my satellite signal carried on like a trooper.

Now that I live in snow country, I do lose my signal when it snows. But you know why, because the snow is sitting on the damn dish, not inefficient signal strength. All I do is when I snow is coming, spray some Pam on the thing and voila, I never lose my signal.

I do have friends with cable. I've seen their signal. It's fuzzier than government logic. Maybe Xfinity is great, I don't know. But I have yet to hear from someone who likes their service all that much. But I do know people from all sorts of cable providers and their cable goes out more Tara Reid during spring break.

So, I ask, are we as a people that easily swayed by an admittedly clever ad that has singing buffoons? Apparently, if they keep doing these amusing ads and making the same claims. It's obviously getting them customers. Hmm...this started out as an impeachment of advertising...maybe I should be criticizing the malleable will of the average television viewer....

That said, the commercials are amusing enough. I just often wonder what documentation an advertiser must show to prove the veracity of their claims? I mean, does "Well, I knew this one guy who's cousin had a friend that said their dish went down in the rain once" qualify as verification? Or maybe my experiences are special. I have to admit, there is a nice feeling knowing I could be special.


Thursday, March 17, 2011

Angel Soft: Can you toss me a roll

As you'll soon see, I really over think the ads. Why? Because it's what I do with everything really. You could try to come up with some psycho-analytical reason as to why, but I once read that lefties make everything more difficult than they need to, so I'm going with that.

This little trait of mine leads me to our first commercial: Angel Soft Toss Me A Roll.

Have you seen it? I'm sure you have, it's been on constantly. Apparently Americans poop a lot. Could have something to do with our meat-heavy, fatty food-laden diets. But hey, we're number 1! Winning! Duh! (Obligatory Charlie Sheen reference: Check)

Anyway, here's the ad in case you get Internet under the rock beneath which you're living if you have yet to see this ad.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cYZMlOFU4zM

First thought: Okay, we've all done it. Walked in and realized only too late that oops, the roll is empty. HELP! That's fine.

But after he was either tossed a roll of toilet paper (or bath tissue as they call it, which somehow is apparently supposed to soften the thought that we wipe our butts with this stuff) or was grazed by a high-powered elephant round, you'd think he would be a bit more careful about asking someone to lob an apparently lethal weapon at him. But no! We see he hasn't learned from this incident, and again asks for someone to toss him the TP, mangy looking head wound notwithstanding. This time the off-camera throwmeister apparently chucked a snowball at the guy. Nice.

In a living example of Einstein's definition of insanity, the guy once again asks someone to "toss him a roll." This time, we see the scamp has been his wife. However, she took pity after nearly killing him and then pelting him with fluff, and tosses Angel Soft. Aaahhh.

Here's my question: After the second time, don't you think he would have, oh, I don't know, gotten the roll himself rather than risk his life? Maybe his wife really is trying to kill him, or at least get him to leave. After all, every time we see this guy, his wife is apparently doing laundry, since that's where she is, throwing him another roll. Perhaps if he pitched in around the house, she'd be a bit nicer.

All this said, it's still not the worst toilet paper commercial out there. If I never see those charmin bears with the pieces of toiler paper on their bear buts, or as I call them, The Dinglebearies, I'll be a happy man.


I really don't like these bears...