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Say What?: Commercials That Made Us Scratch Our Heads


Lola16
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8 minutes ago, peacheslatour said:

I just saw a Turbo Tax commercial where this woman is calling to ask if the tiny teenagers crawling around on her ceiling are deductible. WTF?

I am pretty sure that was Kathy Bates and they were doing a bit about her roll on American Horror Story.  "Hey can I use the ghosts in my house as dependants?  No.  But I can use them as moving expense?  Well I guess I have to move again."  

I thought it was kinda funny.

Edited by Chaos Theory
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Just now, Chaos Theory said:

I am pretty sure that was KathybBates and they were doing a bit about her roll on American Horror Story.  "Hey can I use the ghosts in my house as dependants?  No.  Well I guess I have to move again."  

I thought it was kinda funny.

OMG, that was Kathy Bates? Has she lost a bunch of weight? I love American Horror Story, but I don't remember any tropes like tiny teenagers crawling on the ceiling.  You may have just given Ryan Murphy an idea.

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Well, you KNOW somebody's gonna make that mistake and end up suing Starbuck's.  WHY would they name something the same as a laxative?  That's like re-naming half & half and saying they put Milk of Magnesia in the coffee.  OK, so Starbuck's didn't NAME the cherry stuff, but, by gum, THAT's when they should step in and re-name it so it doesn't get confused with the laxative Cascara.

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I think I just saw my most favoritist phone-sex commercial ever. According to the commercial, we should call them so that we can get some practice talking to women. Because talking is hard. Yeah, that's the primary reason guys call those lines; to get a tutorial in communication.

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7 hours ago, Sandman87 said:

According to the commercial, we should call them so that we can get some practice talking to women. Because talking is hard.

I mean, I'm sure it's an outlier case, but I would not be surprised to discover they realized they had a small-but-consistent proportion of their calls actually being that and maybe they figured, hey, push it. The rest of their segments, they know exactly why they're calling but if they think they've got some untapped segment they can boost...if it works the marketing person's gonna make bank.

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7 hours ago, theatremouse said:

I mean, I'm sure it's an outlier case, but I would not be surprised to discover they realized they had a small-but-consistent proportion of their calls actually being that and maybe they figured, hey, push it. The rest of their segments, they know exactly why they're calling but if they think they've got some untapped segment they can boost...if it works the marketing person's gonna make bank.

In an age where people stare at their cell phones and would rather text than talk to anyone, I think we've got a vast untapped market. I think a lot of people know how to watch porn, but talk? 

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9 hours ago, theatremouse said:

I mean, I'm sure it's an outlier case, but I would not be surprised to discover they realized they had a small-but-consistent proportion of their calls actually being that and maybe they figured, hey, push it. The rest of their segments, they know exactly why they're calling but if they think they've got some untapped segment they can boost...if it works the marketing person's gonna make bank.

Or maybe it's intended to make it easy to come up with plausible lies:

""Honey, who are you talking to?"

"Uh, just my speech therapist..."

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Kerri Walsh Jennings, one of the only reasons I've ever watched beach volleyball and only during the Olympics, is doing an ad for Honest. I haven't looked it up, I assume from the ads it is a line of environmentally acceptable household products. But I haven't been able to tell from the ads, I've looked. Is she spraying cleaner on the front of a gas stove with a burner on? From what I know of gas stoves, that doesn't seem very smart. I never spray any cleaner on the stove while I'm cooking anything. I have wiped up spills, but she is spraying. I just can't tell if the burner is on or not. 

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18 hours ago, mojoween said:

I don't understand the point of the Geico ad where the vintage dishes talk to each other.  What is it trying to tell me?

Take a closer look -- and then they zoom in on minutia. I like the clock ad, "there's no butter in this churn."

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There's an ad for a heartburn medication -- two women eating lunch in the park, little animated fireball lurking nearby. Our protagonist who takes the drug is no longer bothered by him; I, however, am bothered by her outfit. She's wearing a casual top, casual pants, casual shoes ... and one of those statement necklaces with the huge crystals. I admire her confidence (which is probably the point), but that necklace doesn't go with the rest of the outfit. And then our target, who is appropriately dressed, has to run out of the park because she doesn't take the drug and the fireball is chasing her. 

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4 hours ago, ennui said:

There's an ad for a heartburn medication -- two women eating lunch in the park, little animated fireball lurking nearby. Our protagonist who takes the drug is no longer bothered by him; I, however, am bothered by her outfit. She's wearing a casual top, casual pants, casual shoes ... and one of those statement necklaces with the huge crystals. I admire her confidence (which is probably the point), but that necklace doesn't go with the rest of the outfit. And then our target, who is appropriately dressed, has to run out of the park because she doesn't take the drug and the fireball is chasing her. 

This, of course, leads to the question, does the drug ward off the fireball or is it the awesome power of her crystal necklace?  Necklace power, activate!

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Has anyone seen the Toyota Camry ad with the female driver saying getting the Camry was the best decision she ever made? Her passenger, another women, says something like "HEY!" At first I thought that the passenger and driver were girlfriends, until the driver gets a call from "Trey". Not just Trey, but the display on the dashboard says, "Trey--Don't Answer". When the call come in, you see the passenger watching the driver wondering if she's going to answer the call. She does, says, "Hey, Trey!" and the passenger breathes a sigh of relief while the driver has a "What?" expression her face.

Is there a longer version this commercial with the saga of Trey and the Camry driver and passenger I'm not aware of? What is going on? Is the passenger Trey's sister? Why does the driver have "Don't answer" next to his name?

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I'm not sure I've seen the ad you're talking about, but from your description, I don't think "Don't Answer" is next to his name as in...part of the contact or some kind of note...I think it's a button on the screen, ie to send it directly to voicemail.

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On 2/5/2017 at 11:44 PM, Sandman87 said:

I could swear I just heard the Colonel on one of those KFC commercials promoting their "ten dollar chicken shit."

The current ad campaign is incomprehensible, so why not. (I didn't understand the "gold" Colonel during the SuperBowl. I shouldn't have to think this hard about fast food fried chicken.)

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1 hour ago, ennui said:

I scratch my head at all the Valentine's Day ads that target hopeless men who haven't a clue. The Giant Teddy Bear, and the Footie Pajamas. Guys? No. 

As I mentioned in the Holiday thread...a heart-shaped Papa John's pizza isn't the way to go, either.

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20 hours ago, Sandman87 said:

All I know is that for ten dollars, that better be a whole lot of chicken shit. I can get a 50 pound bag of cow shit for just seven dollars.

It's weird but at our local QFC (Krogers) they sell whole lovely, hot rotisserie chicken for about six bucks, but a naked, raw whole chicken is like ten or twelve.

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19 minutes ago, peacheslatour said:

It's weird but at our local QFC (Krogers) they sell whole lovely, hot rotisserie chicken for about six bucks, but a naked, raw whole chicken is like ten or twelve.

I read this article on a blog that basically said the rotisserie chickens are cheaper as a way to get customers in the door and hopefully buy sides or other groceries while they're there.

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31 minutes ago, Jaded said:

I read this article on a blog that basically said the rotisserie chickens are cheaper as a way to get customers in the door and hopefully buy sides or other groceries while they're there.

I once saw a woman at Costco who bought a rotisserie chicken, and nothing else. I marveled.

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20 hours ago, Sandman87 said:

I'm almost tempted to get a dog, just so I'd have someone to eat all the cat poop on offer here.

KFC must be so proud of the conversations that their ads inspire.

I'm cracking up while my cat looks at me with utter disdain.

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