In ’94 USA Today declaired the Mentos “Fresh Goes Better” campaign one of the worst ad campaigns even though sales doubled in ’94 and tripled in ’96.
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In ’94 USA Today declaired the Mentos “Fresh Goes Better” campaign one of the worst ad campaigns even though sales doubled in ’94 and tripled in ’96.
The post In ’94 USA Today declaired the Mentos… appeared first on Crazy Facts.
Ethan Zuckerman, the man who invented pop-up ads, has apologized to the world for creating one of the Internet’s most hated forms of advertising.
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In 1984, Burger King ran an ad campaign with a character called “Mister Rodney” touting its superior cooking over McDonald’s. The campaign was stopped after Mister Rogers himself called Burger King’s vice president, who had the commercial taken off the air.
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Unless you’ve been living in seclusion for the past month or so, you’ve seen the now-infamous Peloton commercial and you’ve heard all the blowback regarding the ad.
You know the one…
this ad is making me lose my goddamn mind pic.twitter.com/GXgypRkFOg
— Sam (@SamuelMoen) December 1, 2019
People are upset that the commercial sends the wrong message to women and that it is passive-aggressive about weight issues.
Let’s see what folks on Twitter had to say about this…
Look I don’t want to be “The Peloton Ad Guy” anymore but the newest commercial about the vlogging 116 lb woman’s YEARLONG fitness journey to becoming a 112 lb woman who says “I didn’t realize how much this would change me” is just ri-god-damn-diculous. Come on.
— Clue Heywood (@ClueHeywood) November 25, 2019
Peloton is legally required to repossess your bike if at least one wall of your house isn’t entirely windows
— the drake gatsby (@DrakeGatsby) December 4, 2019
everyone’s mad at peloton because you can’t use it to ride to the ice cream store. sorry but i ride my peloton to the ice cream store every day. if you’re not pedaling hard enough that’s a you problem
— Jon Bois (@jon_bois) December 4, 2019
Take me down to the Peloton city where the wives are lean and the men are shitty
— The Volatile Mermaid (@OhNoSheTwitnt) December 3, 2019
I *knew* I'd seen that #peloton face before! pic.twitter.com/LCtn81FyOR
— Honorable Rod Shaw (@aswadrodz) December 3, 2019
the peloton ad is perfect and good and there is nothing wrong with a surveillance hamster wheel in your home
— sarah jeong (@sarahjeong) December 4, 2019
The lady in the Peloton ad has Perpetually Sad Eyebrows and that is 100% of the reason why the ad is problematic
— Helen Rosner (@hels) December 4, 2019
Peloton responds to ad criticism: “Stop the mean tweets by midnight or we will never release her.”
— JP (@jpbrammer) December 4, 2019
if any one of your husbands wants to buy me a peloton i will not be offended
— David Mack (@davidmackau) December 4, 2019
Me seeing the #peloton ad pic.twitter.com/1uym67mETj
— 26.2 Miler (@ChristinePThoma) December 3, 2019
I’d ask that woman in the Peloton commercial to blink twice if she needs help, but her husband already botoxed her eyelids for her birthday.
— Seth C. Payne (@SethCPayne) December 3, 2019
The face you make when your day requires videoing your workout, keeping floor to ceiling windows spotless, and hoping your kid doesn’t spill anything on the white furniture #peloton pic.twitter.com/4xe2YvcMUF
— Katie Kohler (@kkohler1129) December 3, 2019
An alternate commercial where he buys his wife a bicycle instead of a Peloton, and introduces her to bike Twitter. A year later she plays him videos of clownishly incompetent drivers, terrible bike infrastructure, and beautiful sunsets.
— David Wagoner (@dfwagoner) December 4, 2019
Me, knowing that the hot Peloton mom will be single in a month… #Peloton pic.twitter.com/TAgYV0RaBC
— Commander Pebbles (@PebblesCousin) December 3, 2019
Peloton ad girl and Bill O'Reilly's corgi have the same energy. pic.twitter.com/JtxiGJoL5P
— Vas Drimalitis (@vasdrimalitis) December 4, 2019
What are your thoughts about this commercial and the controversy surrounding it?
The post Here Are Some Funny Responses to That Peloton Commercial Everyone Is Talking About appeared first on UberFacts.
Do you have young kiddos? If so, you know what an absolute treat it can be getting them dressed during the cold winter months! Lots of screaming, crying, fighting, and tantrum-throwing to liven up your long days!
And if you don’t have kids, you remember these days from your childhood, don’t you? I sure do. It was a constant battle between my mom and myself, no one willing to give an inch and back down. Good times!
Well, Saturday Night Live recently nailed this phenomenon in a hilarious fake Macy’s commercial about the trials and tribulations of trying to dress little kids during the winter.
The commercial starts off typically enough as a Christmas ad with happy families having a grand time.
…But then the whole thing starts to go downhill pretty quickly. The kids start to complain about various issues with their clothes. “It’s too hot!” “It itches!”
And the narrator tells us that “Tis the season for wrestling your wiggly little monster into thick winter clothes.”
Of course, there are winter clothes that won’t fit over any kid’s head.
And there are corduroys that will…well, you’ll see…
What’s in store for all the sweet little girls out there? This!
She’ll love those!
And you better believe those winter jackets are so huge that no kid will be able to fit into a car seat!
Are you ready to see this video in its entirety? Here you go!
Is that spot-on, or what?
Ho Ho Ho and Happy Holidays!
Stay warm out there!
The post Watch This ‘Saturday Night Live’ Skit About the Hell That Is Dressing Your Kids During Winter appeared first on UberFacts.
There is a 1982 Barbie commercial that ends with the line “Better make Ken a sandwich!” 00
The Verizon Wireless TV spokesman was eager to get out of his contract when someone said “can you hear me now” at his grandmother’s funeral. 00
A man sued Pepsico after the company refused to redeem his 7,000,000 Pepsi Points for a AV-8 Harrier II jump jet as advertised in their commercial.