|
Miserable office workers starred in several commercials. Careerbuilder.com brought back its office chimps, this time driving cars, and blocking and then crashing into a hapless office employee who is "stuck between a bad job and a hard place." Bridgestone showed an office worker driving around town to steal co-workers' computers after being told he hit "Reply All" to an e-mail. Not all ads were funny. Motorola Mobility's 60-second spot during the second quarter played off of the famous Apple ad "1984." The dialogue-free Motorola ad shows a world where drones dress all in white and wear Apple iPod-like earbuds and a man uses a Xoom tablet to free and woo a girl. The message is that Apple has become an oppressor rather than a liberator, and show Motorola's tablet as a worthy opponent to Apple's popular iPad, said Bill Ogle, chief marketing officer of Motorola Mobility. "A lot of people just try to go for laughs," he said. "There are all kinds of sex and monkeys and horses (during the Super Bowl), but what we were trying to do is a bit more of a serious story." The automaker ads, usually known for beautiful pictures of cars winding down mountain roads but not for being memorable, used humor and surprise to try to remedy that. One early hit was a Volkswagen's ad that showed a boy in a Darth Vader costume trying to use "The Force" on objects, including the Passat. "It really wasn't selling a car, it was selling a feeling, and it tapped into its target market of families very effectively, which you usually don't see in a car ad," said Robert Colt, an instructor at Michigan State University College of Communication Arts & Sciences. Volkswagen released the ad early on Youtube.com and it became an instant viral hit, with more than 13 million views before the game even started. If the ad wins the annual USAToday Ad Meter poll, it will be a first. The highest an automaker has ever gotten is third place, which a Nissan ad nabbed in 1997. ___ Online:
[Associated
Press;
Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
News | Sports | Business | Rural Review | Teaching & Learning | Home and Family | Tourism | Obituaries
Community |
Perspectives
|
Law & Courts |
Leisure Time
|
Spiritual Life |
Health & Fitness |
Teen Scene
Calendar
|
Letters to the Editor