Preview

Superbowl Advertisement Analysis

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
620 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Superbowl Advertisement Analysis
The Superbowl has been a part of American culture for what is now 50 years, as of yesterday. Many people enjoy it for different reasons, whether it's actually watching the football, the food at parties, or what most enjoy, the commercials. The commercials are enjoyed almost as much as the football itself, because in order to get your ad in the Superbowl, you have to pay a rather demanding fine. So, as a result of the large payment, companies will up the bar for the quality of their commercials, to make sure their money doesn't go to waste. One of these commercials was by Mountain Dew, showcasing their new flavor of kickstart, midnight grape, with a rather obscure mascot dubbed "puppy monkey baby." Yet how did it hold up compared to all of the other commercials?

The ad starts out with 3 men sitting on a couch, with one talking about how he "might just chill tonight," in other words, they don't really have plans. Then a creature that has the legs of a baby, the body and tail of monkey,
…show more content…
It looks as if it will go down as the strangest ad in Superbowl 50. Now, is that a good thing? Not necessarily. To explain, if an ad is found by the viewers as confusing, or strange, then that means they really aren't motivated to buy your product. The add may have been found entertaining by a younger audience, but here's the thing. That's just the younger audience, while still a large demographic and probably the biggest seller to kickstart, the ad really didn't give much motivation to buy a kickstart. It more focused on the little character they had created, and then tried to compare to their product at the end, which on paper, seems rather foolproof. Unfortunately, the overall obscurity and unfamiliarity of the character almost overpowered the analogy they were trying to convey. In conclusion, the puppy monkey baby commercial was too strange to make any potential costumer

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Satisfactory Essays

    Superbowl Commercial

    • 248 Words
    • 1 Page

    This years Superbowl commercial I picked was the Mountain dew puppy monkey baby because it was catchy and kind of weird and that's why I remember it. In the beginning of the commercial it starts off with three guys who are sitting on a couch and want to go out. Until one of the guys say " I think I just want to chill tonight" and that is when a weird looking monkey comes out and keeps saying " Puppy monkey baby."…

    • 248 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    “Massive Exposure, Minimal Impact: Doubts About Super Bowl Ad Effectiveness” is an article written by Greg Sterling. This article discusses the negative effects of Super Bowl Ads. The chance to have an advertisement spot during the Super Bowl is something that can be very beneficial for a company. This opportunity is also a very expensive one. According to the article, “Super Bowl advertisements grants major exposure globally” (Sterling 1). The article also addresses the “division between viewer entertainment, and buying patterns. There is a wide gap between the two. This is an example of the negative effects of Super Bowl Ads. Sterling also talks about a survey done by Genesis Media. The survey found that “a vast majority of the participants…

    • 181 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Superbowl 50: Ad Analysis

    • 578 Words
    • 3 Pages

    One new Superbowl 50 commercial is already causing an uproar. Lil Wayne stars in this one minute commercial, where he is seen cooking up George Washington. TMZ shared why people are so upset about the new Lil Wayne commercial that as of right now will still end up airing on Superbowl Sunday. This ad is for Apartments.com and features Jeff Goldblum and a gospel choir singing Jeffersons theme Moving On Up.…

    • 578 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Unlike the “Like a Girl” commercial, Super bowl commercials reflect the sexuality of women. Super Bowl commercials can be described as the funniest, and most entertaining commercials of the year. However when looking into them they poke fun of women’s sexuality in various ways. The Doritos Super Bowl commercial presents the idea that the only way to get a man to pay attention to you is to offer your body as a prize (Doritos Super Bowl). The whole concept is that a Super Bowl commercial emphasizes the idea in which is supposed to be funny. This further questions medias purpose in society. Media is forcing the knowledge on society that women are used as props to draw viewer’s attention to the screen. It emphasizes that Women are just toys to play with when they are there, but if they were not there it would not be a problem.…

    • 767 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The Super Bowl ad aired during the game's first quarter. Making sure it went big, it compares the product with other big things that made its mark during the last year, like the Hoverboard and drones while Guns N' Roses' "Welcome to the Jungle" plays in the background.…

    • 314 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The reason is because it achieves of giving all the viewers the idea that drunk driving is being considered a huge issue, not just in the United States, but in other countries as well. Unlike the Bud Light commercial, it doesn’t show enough effectiveness with the people in it because everyone is enjoying their beer and they only pay attention to the dog when it’s bringing them their drink. There is not enough understanding or feelings involved like the Budweiser advertisement. In the beginning of the commercial, once the viewer see’s the Labrador puppy, there is cuteness flowing around the scenario, and as it’s growing, we can feel the connection that the dog and the owner have with each other, but with the other ad, nothing like that is going…

    • 965 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    This Hasbro television commercial advertisement came out in the year of 2007 and was promoting the Rose Petal Cottage. The commercial begins with a girl-toddler swinging open the top half of the door, welcoming the camera shot by saying: “Come on in.” She is next seen putting on her apron, which will prepare her for the later activities. The plot thickens when she places her plastic muffins into the fake oven, puts her baby doll to sleep in the provided crib, takes the muffins back out of the oven, says “Taste my muffins. They are really yummy,” reaches out to feed the muffins to the bear, which is sitting in the high chair, and promptly washes her hands right after. The young girl then proceeds to rearrange the small furniture (a sofa chair and a crib) to her likings while saying: “This can go here. And this goes here.” Up to this point, the narrator, a soft motherly voice, has said: “Now there is a place…Where her dreams have room to grow…The Rose Petal Cottage…A place of her very own where she can decorate.” The narrator continues by stating that she can “Contain her imagination,” while the camera pans to her doing laundry. The commercial comes to an end when the little girl pulls a woman – who looks the right age of her mother – by the hand to her opened up cottage and presents it to her with a big: “Ta – Da!” The older woman says, “I love what you have done with the place.” They then sit on the floor, laughing, and holding the fake muffins while the narrator repeats the slogan: “It’s her place, where her dreams have room to grow.”…

    • 1300 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    A blind footballer kicking a cat and call centre workers singing with their mouths full are among the stars of the most controversial adverts of the past 50 years.…

    • 372 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Snickers Kiss

    • 798 Words
    • 4 Pages

    Snickers is one of the companies that always produce catchy , funny and controversial commercials for their audiences. Some of the commercials are highly accepted by the audience while others receive tons of critiques. One of the most controversial commercials that received a lot of critiques was the one that they made for the 2007 Superbowl. This commercial was offensive because it openly mocks gay men as being not ‘manly’.…

    • 798 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The screen fades up to an image of a soldier being greeted by his wife in an airport. “On Jan 8th, Lt. Chuck Nadd came home” is printed across the screen. Soon after, it cuts to a clip of the couple driving home in a red Ford Explorer with the caption “we gave him a homecoming he’d never forget” in white. It is unclear at this point, however, who “we” is referring to. The camera cuts to signs that reads “We love Chuck”, “We’re glad you’re home”, and “We’re proud of you” with a soft song featuring a woman’s voice plays in the background. The soldier is visibly overcome with joy. Following his warm welcome home, a parade takes place for the soldier. Him and his wife ride in a horse drawn carriage while hundreds of members of the community wave and cheer. The camera focuses on one woman in particular, jumping up and down and waving with one hand, while holding an American flag in the other. The soldier runs up to and embraces her, and the viewer can infer that she is his mother. “Every soldier deserves a hero’s’ welcome” then appears on the screen, and dissolves to Budweiser’s slogan with “#Salute a Hero” displayed underneath it.…

    • 622 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    To start of the ad, you see a mom gardening in her backyard and smiling as she watches her daughter hanging upside down on the playground set. The cute little girl is smiling from ear to ear, and having the time of her life. The playground bar then transitions to an uneven bar in a gymnastics center. Now, the moms smile is replaced with a coaches smile,…

    • 638 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Ad Campaign Analysis

    • 2334 Words
    • 10 Pages

    James Murphy, editorial director at the Future Foundation, says Stratos shows that Red Bull isn’t solely a provider of content anymore. ‘This is the purest example of the brand as a story; the brand itself has become content,’ he explains. Murphy believes the scientific and technological pay-off of the campaign reflects a level of sophistication that conventional CSR couldn’t reach.…

    • 2334 Words
    • 10 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    The main protagonist in this advert is a man who is about forty years old. We know he has a family, as through the advert we see him walking children home and when he goes to bed at night there is a woman in the bed with him, this can be implied that it is his wife and children. The man however looks worn down, there are dark circles underneath his eyes and deep wrinkles in his forehead and face. Throughout the advert there is very little emotion shown on the man's face, he never smiles, the only emotion he shows throughout the whole advert is sadness and depression.…

    • 2015 Words
    • 9 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Advert Analysis

    • 1273 Words
    • 6 Pages

    Companies such as Persil and Barnados use adverts for multiple reasons but their main aim is to make the company more widely know, throughout this essay I will be comparing how two different adverts, from two different companies do this.…

    • 1273 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Michi

    • 806 Words
    • 4 Pages

    The first commercial featured former England left back, Stuart Pearce, who is famous for football, aiming a football at the annoying Gio. Well first off I was so glad that Stuart had the same feeling as the audience towards the Italian character Gio who is deliberately repeating the annoying company jingle. However kicking a football into the singer’s stomach has set bad examples for the children. Children are likely to obey what they see and copy what they learnt. Even though the Advertising Standards Authority (ASA) claimed that the commercial was a ‘light-hearted’ meant no offence or either set a bad examples. Well we all agree that the producer should of thought about the consequences. Right?…

    • 806 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays