Grading the Super and Not-So-Super 'Super Bowl XLV' Ads

[Ed. Note: For a refresher course, you can watch every Super Bowl ad right here.]

Before I get started on my review of this year’s Super Bowl commercials I want to come to the aid of a lady in distress. Can we lay off of Christina Aguilera and her muffed line in the National Anthem? Look, she was nervous, under pressure, and out of her element. The NFL asked her to sing fully clothed and without a stripper pole to hang onto. While I’m on the subject of the Nation Anthem why can’t the football players show a little respect when the country is being honored? Their sideline slouching was shameful! Roger Goodell, get out your paddle and take some of those guys to the woodshed.

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Once again, the folks who thought Super Bowl 45 was a good way to spend their investors dollars, spent slightly more than the gross national product of Niger and Ethiopia combined with, in most cases, very mediocre results. With so many ads it’s hard in a short piece to hit them all so I am skipping all the promos and movie trailers although the Fox/House parody of the 1980 Mean Joe Green was one of my favorites.

I think I have finally figured out that GoDaddy.com is run by a horny fifteen year old boy out of his parents’ basement. What in the world does trying to make me think Joan Rivers is hot have to do with getting a domain name? Joan is a safe distance from “hot” no matter how many body doubles they used. I don’t know how much money Danica Patrick and Jillian Michaels are paid to debase themselves in what year after years have been the unsexiest and unfunniest ads, but it isn’t nearly enough. The ads beg us to go to their website to see the “uncensored” endings to the ads. I wonder how many frustrated high school boys went to GoDaddy thinking they were going to see Ms. Patrick and Ms. Michaels in the buff but only found a lame joke/dance number instead. Can someone tell me who GoDaddy’s biggest competitor are because I am moving my domain name.

The Groupon ads with Timothy Hutton and Cuba Gooding Jr. were clever and, as a conservative, I liked how tweaked liberal causes. This series was among my favorites until I had to explain to my 12 year-old boy what a “Brazilian Wax” was after the Elizabeth Hurley ad. Do we really need to make jokes about crotch waxing during a sporting event watched by families?

Pepsi Max/Doritos continued their series of homemade ads, which this year fell woefully short of the high standard that had been set in previous years. Cans to the groin, spousal abuse and felony assault: hilarious! The finger licker and pants sniffer guy was just creepy and made me wonder how the HR person at this company still has a job. I must admit, though, I did like the “tiny dog through the door” ad, and if I were picking the winner “house sitter who revives grandpa” would get the money.

Some brief takes some of the others… Eminem doesn’t normally do commercials but he had two. Is anyone convinced the rap star is pimping down Woodward Ave. in a Chrysler 200?

Coke Dragon ad: Predictable.

Faith Hill’s Teleflora nice “rack” joke ad: Please refer to Elizabeth Hurley comment.

Richard Lewis and Roseanne Barr for Snickers: Not bad for variations on a theme.

Motorola Xoom: Let me see if I have this right; if you have a Xoom you are a rule breaker and not at all like the zombies using that other Smartphone. So let’s all run out and get a Xoom, so we can all be the different again. Do I have it?

Chevy Truck/Lassie: I chuckled.

Bud Light/ Home Improvement: Weak.

Bud Light/Dogs: Weaker.

Chatter.com: Forgettable.

Mercedes Benz/Diddy: Look who we spent too much money on to get in our ad.

Chevy Cruse/Old Folks: Oops I think you missed a cliché.

Career Builders: Monkeys are always funny!

E Trade/Babies: Apparently as babies get older they lose their sense of humor!

The cream of the crop for this year were very good. The Bud Light “product placement” ad was an example of taking a joke and running it into the ground until you can’t help but laugh. When the Bud Light truck comes screaming into the frame I was laughing my butt off.

Both Bridgestone Tire ads were clever and well done. The “reply all” ad was my runner-up favorite of the evening. Is there anybody under the age of 90 who hasn’t sent an e mail they wish they could pull back? The other Bridgestone ad had a high cute factor with the beaver repaying the driver who swerved to avoid hitting him. I liked Kia “Epic Ride” but my overall favorite for the day was the CarMax, “I Feel Like…” ad. Though both ads followed a series of connected vignettes, the quirky similes of the CarMax ad made it my big winner!

Agree, disagree or maybe I missed your favorite, let me hear from you.

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