NEW
YORK (AP) — During advertising’s biggest night, Super Bowl Sunday,
marketers battled it out to bolster their brands and promote new
products. Advertisers paid up to $5.6 million for 30 seconds, and almost
100 million people tune into the big game.
This
year, Hyundai and Jeep scored with whimsical humor by poking fun at
Boston accents and reuniting the “Groundhog Day” cast, Punxsutawney Phil
included. Google struck heartstrings with a quiet message about aging
and remembrance. Cheetos and Doritos both played off exaggerated dancing
to good effect.
But Pop Tarts and a Hard Rock action-movie commercial failed to connect with viewers.
BEST
The
automaker released its ad early, but it still drew fans during the
game. Boston-affiliated celebrities including actor Chris Evans, John
Krasinski, Saturday Night Live alum Rachel Dratch and former Boston Red
Sox player David Ortiz discussed a Hyundai feature that lets car owners
park remotely with exaggerated accents that make “Smart Park” sound like
“smaht pahk.”
Super
Bowl Sunday was on Groundhog Day, so someone had to do it. Fiat
Chrysler painstakingly recreated the 1993 movie “Groundhog Day,”
including the town square and other locales, with original actors Bill
Murray, Brian Doyle Murray and Stephen Tobolowsky. The twist: instead of
a Chevrolet truck, Murray uses a Jeep Gladiator truck. FCA Group
marketing chief Olivier Francois said the ad worked to demonstrate the
versatility of the Jeep truck since Murray does something different
every day.
Google’s
90-second ad stood out by not using humor or celebrities. It features a
man reminiscing about his wife, using the Google Assistant feature to
pull up old photos of her and past vacations. The ad is set to an
instrumental version of “Say Something” by Great Big World. “It’s so
hard to write earnestly and not make it cheesy,” said Julia Neumann,
executive creative director at ad agency
TBWA(backslash)Chiat(backslash)Day in New York. “This was really, really
well done.”
Cheetos
used nostalgia effectively, appropriating the 30 year old MC Hammer
classic “U Can’t Touch This” — still an earworm after all these years.
The snack-food ad features a man with bright orange Cheetos dust on his
hands who uses it as an excuse not to move furniture and perform office
tasks. Hammer himself — “Hammer pants” and all — also kept popping up to
utter his iconic catchphrase.
The
brand added a silly danceoff to “Old Town Road,” the smash hit of the
summer by Lil Nas X. In the Western-themed ad, Lil Nas faced off with
grizzled character actor Sam Elliott with silly, sometimes CGI-enhanced
dances moves at the “Cool Ranch.” Billy Cyrus, who features in the
song’s remix, also made a cameo.
Planters
teased its Super Bowl ad nearly two weeks before the game, releasing a
teaser that showed its Mr. Peanut mascot seemingly being killed. The
“death” of Mr. Peanut went viral on Twitter. But when Kobe Bryant was
killed in a helicopter crash, the marketing stunt suddenly seemed
insensitive, so Planters paused its pre-game advertising. The actual
Super Bowl ad was relatively inoffensive, with a baby Mr. Peanut
appearing at the funeral. “Baby Nut” comparisons to “Baby Yoda” and
“Baby Groot” sprung up online.
WORST
Avocados
from Mexico have carved out a niche with humorous ads featuring
avocados, but they may have veered a little too far into “random”
territory with this effort featuring a home shopping network with fake
products such as a baby carrier-like device for avocados. “I thought the
Avocados from Mexico spot felt like a random and gratuitous use of
celebrity,” said Steve Merino, chief creative officer of Aloysius,
Butler & Clark in Wilmington, Delaware. “Not only did it not make
sense to have Molly Ringwald as your spokesperson, it was also a bit of a
distraction.”
Kellogg’s
went for quirky but ended up with a bland spot that isn’t likely to be
remembered. In a pseudo infomercial, Jonathan Van Ness of “Queer Eye”
describes the new Pop Tarts pretzel snack. The idea is that Pop Tarts
adds pizazz to pretzels, but the ad itself failed to have much spark.
Winona
Ryder went back to Winona, Minnesota — which she is named after — to
create a website for the town. But nothing much happened in the ad,
which shows Ryder in a snowdrift on her laptop being confronted by a
“Fargo”-like cop. There’s a more involved marketing campaign with Ryder,
but the Super Bowl ad didn’t communicate much.
HARD ROCK INTERNATIONAL
Hard
Rock International went all in on its first Super Bowl ad, maybe too
much so. It enlisted Michael Bay for a frenetic commercial showing a
frenzied heist caper involving Jennifer Lopez, Alex Rodriguez, DJ
Khaled, Pitbull, and Steven Van Zandt — but some found it hard to
follow.
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