Jump to content

Type keyword(s) to search

Say What?: Commercials That Made Us Scratch Our Heads


Lola16
  • Reply
  • Start Topic

Recommended Posts

Has anyone seen this new ad for the Koch company? It's like every weird cliche ad from a dystopian future where our corporate overlords remind us that they're there but try to sound peaceful, but also "we're everywhere". Setting aside for the moment anything about the realities of this particular company, it's odd to me they'd want to evoke that image? Seriously the ad firm must've been watching movies and decided to mimic the stereotype. When it first came on I kept expecting that ad to be a fake or a parody of something because it's such cliche, neofuturistic, corporate dictatorship vibe.

  • Love 4
Link to comment
On 11/15/2016 at 0:51 PM, mmecorday said:

There's a commercial for some wealth management firm with a girl scrambling up the stairs to her apartment. She gets a phone call from her dad. "How was your first week?" asks dad. "Long," says the exhausted and disheveled girl. She gets to her apartment and the conversation continues. Dad is with his financial adviser and she wants to talk to the daughter about her long-term financial goals. The daughter correctly surmises that dad is just working out a way for daughter to maximize her money so that she can "pay him back." Pay him back for what? For raising her? For putting her through college?

 

ETA: Here it is. It's an ad for Edward Jones. The comments have been disabled, which usually means that people had unkind things to say.

She can afford a sweet downtown loft with eight foot tall windows. She damn well better be able to pay her dad back for whatever she owes him.

22 hours ago, theatremouse said:

Has anyone seen this new ad for the Koch company? It's like every weird cliche ad from a dystopian future where our corporate overlords remind us that they're there but try to sound peaceful, but also "we're everywhere". Setting aside for the moment anything about the realities of this particular company, it's odd to me they'd want to evoke that image? Seriously the ad firm must've been watching movies and decided to mimic the stereotype. When it first came on I kept expecting that ad to be a fake or a parody of something because it's such cliche, neofuturistic, corporate dictatorship vibe.

I am a firm believer that the more a mega corp advertises about the "benefits" their company provides society, the more evil they are.

These people can afford to buy Benz's but they don't have cell phones to freakin' call each other?

  • Love 5
Link to comment
On ‎11‎/‎11‎/‎2016 at 0:47 PM, Joe Blow said:

I get the concept of the LetItGo ads (someone needs convincing to get rid of something they're not using)...but it's basically someone being a real jerk to someone else about something the other person would clearly really like to keep.  It does not make me want to use the site in any way.

Why is the owner of the item never the one selling it on those LetItGo ads?

On ‎11‎/‎16‎/‎2016 at 3:52 PM, Cobalt Stargazer said:

Speaking of music, Estee Lauder is using Lady Marmalade in their new ad. The original and not the cover from Moulin Rouge, but still. I'm like, Ya'll know that song is about a hooker, right?

Speaking of which, does Covergirl really think they are going to sell  their makeup by featuring that makeup-wearing freak in their ads? Sorry, he looks like a drag-clown.

  • Love 5
Link to comment
43 minutes ago, Ubiquitous said:

Speaking of which, does Covergirl really think they are going to sell  their makeup by featuring that makeup-wearing freak in their ads? Sorry, he looks like a drag-clown.

Yeah, he kinda creeps me out.  I'm not evolved enough, I guess.

  • Love 4
Link to comment

So there's a google ad with this dad reading a book to his daughter about a whale? But I listened to 80% of the ad and kept thinking he was saying "ok Booboo", and I was like "can you give Alexa a different name now or something?  because I didn't recognize the image of the device he was clearly talking to. As in, program it to respond to whatever name you want? (who knows why he'd choose "Booboo") I have Android devices. I use "OK google" regularly. Dude needs to enunciate. Even after I saw the splashed google logo, it still sounded like he said "booboo" after that in the very end of the ad.

Edited by theatremouse
  • Love 2
Link to comment
4 hours ago, Ubiquitous said:

Speaking of which, does Covergirl really think they are going to sell  their makeup by featuring that makeup-wearing freak in their ads? Sorry, he looks like a drag-clown.

I don't know that specific Covergirl ad, but my wife has dragged me to a couple of Mac stores.  A bunch of people (guys and girls) wearing very unflattering black clothes and all kinds of really awful makeup selling you...makeup.  I don't understand why a weird looking mime is a good makeup sales tactic, but apparently it is..

  • Love 3
Link to comment
6 hours ago, Joe Blow said:

I don't know that specific Covergirl ad, but my wife has dragged me to a couple of Mac stores.  A bunch of people (guys and girls) wearing very unflattering black clothes and all kinds of really awful makeup selling you...makeup.  I don't understand why a weird looking mime is a good makeup sales tactic, but apparently it is..

My ex-boyfriend who wore makeup always said "if you can tell someone is wearing makeup, it was done wrong".

james-charlesn-new-coverboy.jpg

  • Love 3
Link to comment
1 hour ago, Ubiquitous said:

My ex-boyfriend who wore makeup always said "if you can tell someone is wearing makeup, it was done wrong".

 

Well, that's also what Aunt Becky told DJ, so that's basically the extent of my knowledge.

  • Love 2
Link to comment
5 hours ago, Ubiquitous said:

My ex-boyfriend who wore makeup always said "if you can tell someone is wearing makeup, it was done wrong".

james-charlesn-new-coverboy.jpg

IMO, this is a horrible, horrible look for either sex!  Looks like a street performer or Cirque du Soleil.

  • Love 1
Link to comment

That's standard fare of any makeup tutorial on Facebook, YouTube or Instagram. My skin shudders at the thought of all of that product, but that kind of heavy, heavy look is VERY popular now. My 17-year-old niece is into it. She goes crazy with the "strong" brows. Her mom (my sister) wears a ton of makeup, too.

  • Love 1
Link to comment

This commercial is very weird, and pretty dumb.  At first, I thought the lady by the punch bowl didn't know anyone at the party and the lady in red was going to introduce herself.  Nice enough, right?  

So lady in red dumps the earrings in the pink lady's drink...wtf?  What if pink lady had choked on them?

 

Link to comment
5 minutes ago, backformore said:

this commercial would be fine except for the  crotch shot at the beginning:

I never remember what this commercial is, and always think the man is going to have a phone-shaped tan line (non-tan place where his phone was on his chest).

  • Love 2
Link to comment

I know this commercial is from 2014, but I don't remember it then.  You know what's sad about this?  There are actually real people who probably would need a guide like this commercial so they can see who they should and shouldn't give underwear to.

  • Love 2
Link to comment

"Pass the Earrings" ad from JCPenney ... is that a bad pun? Apparently, it's supposed to be an office party. Unless the lady in red has the hots for the lady in pink, it's very weird. That's not how women give gifts to each other.

  • Love 5
Link to comment
On Wednesday, November 23, 2016 at 10:38 AM, Brattinella said:

IMO, this is a horrible, horrible look for either sex!  Looks like a street performer or Cirque du Soleil.

The eyebrows look like they were done with a Magic Marker™. I guess that's one way to get long lasting makeup.

  • Love 2
Link to comment
On 11/16/2016 at 0:52 PM, Cobalt Stargazer said:

Speaking of music, Estee Lauder is using Lady Marmalade in their new ad. The original and not the cover from Moulin Rouge, but still. I'm like, Ya'll know that song is about a hooker, right?

Oh no, they dragged that hoary* chestnut out again? It was actually launched last year.

it seems that perfume ads have a long shelf life. I remember being amazed by how long the J'Adore Dior ad ran unchanged. I think some of the Lancôme fragrance ads have been the same for a while as well.

Meanwhile, I've had the ancient White Shoulders theme song in my head for a week. (Wear it and the world is yours!) No explicable reason. It's just there. ETA apparently I am the on,y person on the internet who remembers this jingle. I've searched a number of times and find no trace of it!

* Pun intended

Edited by ivygirl
  • Love 4
Link to comment

Speaking of perfume ads & a long shelf life the other day I saw a White Diamonds commercial with a 50ish  looking Elizabeth Taylor in it. "These have always brought me luck." Is that commercial like 30 yrs old?

Edited by kat165
  • Love 3
Link to comment

Other than new fragrances, I feel like perfume ads serve no purpose. People tend to choose a fragrance and stick with it. Not everyone, but an overwhelming majority. So unless you're trying to pick up teens, what's the point? Although I guess the margins on new could be worth it... So yeah, your grandmother wears White Diamonds, and has for 25 years. And your mother wears whatever she wears. Etc.

  • Love 2
Link to comment
26 minutes ago, theatremouse said:

Other than new fragrances, I feel like perfume ads serve no purpose. People tend to choose a fragrance and stick with it. Not everyone, but an overwhelming majority. So unless you're trying to pick up teens, what's the point? Although I guess the margins on new could be worth it... So yeah, your grandmother wears White Diamonds, and has for 25 years. And your mother wears whatever she wears. Etc.

When I used to subscribe to magazines, I would always check out the new fragrances via their perfume-strips.  I actually went out and bought a couple new ones just from that. 

  • Love 3
Link to comment
Quote

Other than new fragrances, I feel like perfume ads serve no purpose. People tend to choose a fragrance and stick with it. Not everyone, but an overwhelming majority. So unless you're trying to pick up teens, what's the point?

I have about half a dozen different perfumes at any given time, and there are a couple that are always in the rotation, but otherwise I try new things (I usually sniff at the department store and then buy cheaper online).  But the commercials are still ineffective on me; they can't tell me how something smells, so they rely on pitching a celebrity, or a lifestyle, or a song, or whatever.  A commercial has never sent me looking for a particular fragrance.  When I'm picking up those bottles and sniffing and spraying, I may be reminded of the commercial once I see the name on the bottle, but the only way the ad is going to affect my purchasing decision is in a negative way; if I found the commercial offensive, I won't be buying the perfume even if I like how it smells.

Edited by Bastet
  • Love 4
Link to comment
On 11/27/2016 at 3:15 PM, theatremouse said:

I feel like perfume ads serve no purpose. People tend to choose a fragrance and stick with it.

This is GIFT season. People are buying fragrance as a gift, not for themselves.  Just look at how many stores offer GWP for fragrances. So, you can get perfume AND a bathrobe, woo hooo!!  Ulta was giving away stemless wine glasses with polka dots, who wouldn't want those?  

  • Love 5
Link to comment
57 minutes ago, friendperidot said:

A misunderstood message - "only guys with VD can use Viagra" - that's what I heard, more than once. But somehow, I don't think that's what she says.

I assume she said "guys with ED can use Viagra"

Link to comment

Has anyone seen that commercial for Little Sheba? Or some cat food. A guy and a cat, their eyes meet and he follows the cat into the kitchen and opens a can of little Sheba for s/he (cat) and at the end of the commercial we see him gazing fondly at the cat with his pants down? WTF????

Edited by kat165
  • Love 2
Link to comment
14 minutes ago, kat165 said:

Has anyone seen that commercial for Little Sheba? Or some cat food. A guy and a cat, their eyes meet and he follows the cat into the kitchen and opens a can of little Sheba for s/he (cat) and at the end of the commercial we see him gazing fondly at the cat with his pants down? WTF????

I just saw that one tonight and was APPALLED.  Hubby says I am misunderstanding, but I dunno...

  • Love 2
Link to comment

His pants were down because he was about to get it on with his date, until the cat distracted him. In the long version, you see her huffily putting her clothes back on and glaring at him. Still not sure that makes it better, but I'd prefer devoted owner over perverted owner.

Edited by riley702
  • Love 6
Link to comment
2 minutes ago, riley702 said:

His pants were down because he was about to get it on with his date, until the cat distracted him. In the long version, you see her huffily putting her clothes back on and glaring at him. Still not sure that makes it better, but I'd prefer devoted owner over perverted owner.

Thanks! 

  • Love 2
Link to comment

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Restore formatting

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

×
×
  • Create New...