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Well, Super Bowl XXXIX is history. Too bad for the folks who
consider themselves the always-pullin'-for-the-underdog type.
The Bandwagon team won.
But, as far as Super Bowls go, the losers played well. For those
who care, the Eagles actually covered the 7-point spread. T.O.
is the deal, too. At least on the field, anyway.
They had a chance late in the game, but poor field position and
bad clock management did them in. Scoring from 95 yards out with
48 seconds left? That's a tall order.
So is getting/maintaining ad recall 48 hours after the final
gun. Whose $80,000 per second ad was worth it? Who would've done
better by writing me a fat check for $2.4 million?
Read on, and find out. True to school yard rules: Suckers Walk.
Losers are up first.
Losers: Sorry, Donovan, but your three picks lands you in with
GoDaddy.com, Quizno's, and Silestone. I don't care if you were
ill.
GoDaddy.com had a decent concept that quickly went bad. OK.
Boopsie talking to a Senate subcommittee on C-SPAN about
indecency. Good start- if they cut out any hint to last year's
halftime debacle. But... they couldn't resist. So the buxom
wench wearing a GoDaddy.com t-shirt has a near wardrobe
malfunction. One of the craggy senators has to hit the oxygen
mask.
This ad was supposed to run again, but Fox pulled it mid-game.
Good idea. I bet their stomachs were in as many knots as Donovan
McNabb's.
The Quizno's ad was mediocre at best. This talking baby concept
is tiresome. As cliché as it may be, it's still 80% less
annoying than those whack rodents in pirate hats from a couple
of years ago.
The one stinky Bud Light ad was one that the ESPN crowd really
dug - the parachute-less pilot heading out the door for the six
of Diet Bud. Dumb. The desert island one with Cedric the
Entertainer was iffy, too.
Speaking of stinky... what was up with Napster’s ad? Ugh! It
could wind up doing more to shut them down than the Supreme
Court.
This bad concept was in stark difference to their introductory
spots featuring Flash animation based around their logo. Those
were well-designed and entertaining. This one was as fat and
ugly as the seven shirtless blops they decided to show with a
letter on each of their overdeveloped beer guts to spell
N-A-P-S-T-E-R. It was done in house and, boy, did it show.
The manufactured “reality” of the game and its atmosphere was
lame and no one bought it. An ad taking place at the Super Bowl
should be IN the Super Bowl- done real time. And... trying to
take on Apple’s iTunes on price? That was the second dumbest
decision of this ad. No wonder it finished dead last in
likability and recognition.
Now... Silestone. Valiant effort of an ad featuring Chicago
sports legends. Voice over was good. It was shot nicely. But, it
was a little too jumpy in the cuts to get the whole picture the
first time through. The quick cut style hurt the name
recognition of the line of counter tops.
Silestone and Diana Pearl are not exactly household names. And
Dennis Rodman slurred his line. It sounded like "Dinah Pearl,
rather than, "Diana Pearl." I'm sure the director or writer got
dissed when they said, "Uh, Worm... it's 'Di-A- na'."
"Sure. Dinah."
As a side note, why were only Chicago Bears in it until Dennis
Rodman at the end? No Scottie Pippen or Slammin’ Sammy?
On to the good 'uns...
Winners:
This year, the game was nearly as good as the ads, as there were
a surprisingly good number of breaking spots. Leading the pack
was Career Builder, FedEx, Mastercard, and Anheuser-Busch.
FedEx likes to make ads relating to advertising on advertising's
biggest stage. They did it again - patching together 10 "tried
and true" Super bowl ad conventions to great results.
Career Builder put a great spin on a stale category with the
best work since Monster's "I Wanna Be..." [a brown noser, forced
into retirement, etc.] from '98. Three ads featuring a hapless
chump working for chimps managed to put their name into mind
share largely dominated by two others.
MasterCard got a bunch of animated branded food icons together
for a meal and a nice touch of nostalgia. Ad fans and agency
folks dug this one.
A-B hit emotional hot buttons with a near-public service ad
saluting troops retuning home. Yes, they were real military -
not actors. Their uniforms just did not have any insignias, so
the common soldier would be represented. For their light beer
category, the ad with the head on the wall and the designated
driver spot were the best for Bud Light.
Pepsi’s second year of an iTunes promotion kicked off well. They
ran a humorous spot featuring people opening winning bottles for
a free song. When the bottles were opened, a song reflecting the
drinker’s taste in music would play. Although the spot was
humorous and worked, Pepsi could’ve really hit a home run by
involving the older “authority figure” more into the ad. But,
keeping with brand tradition, they kept the focus young.
AmeriQuest had two entertaining spots revolving around the
themes of misunderstanding and jumping to conclusions. Their
message was, “We don’t prejudge.” The ad featuring spaghetti
sauce, a cat, and knife will certainly make some ‘Best Of” reels
this year.
Decent work also included Honda's new pickup/SUV product
introduction. Good detail with benefit highlights. Left the
"Honda" out until the end. Cadillac and Volvo had solid ads.
Volvo should have bought another ad, if not two, as many people
missed the early run. The audience also may have missed the
details on their unique contest. But they did follow up with
some net portal ads the day after. Ford's F-150 Biker spot was
OK. Their line that "it makes YOU tough," really undercut the
effectiveness.
About the author:
John is a freelance commercial writer based in Omaha, Nebraska.
He publishes a free monthly e-zine focusing on branding,
advertising, and marketing from his web site
http://www.brandedbetter.com. Speaking with both agency and
in-house experience, he knows the most valuable asset of a
business is its brand.
Author: John Jordan
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