Laugh, but not too hard: New Super Bowl advertisers keep it light in
pandemic
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[February 04, 2021]
By Sheila Dang and Uday Sampath Kumar
(Reuters) - In a teaser ad Uber Eats
released ahead of the Super Bowl, actor Mike Myers, reprising his
role as Wayne from “Wayne’s World,” tells sidekick Garth what is on
everybody’s mind: “2020, man, that was a great year...not.”
The food delivery app and other brands doing well during the
pandemic including electronics brand Logitech and gardening company
Scotts Miracle-Gro, will replace long-time advertisers during
Sunday's Super Bowl LV telecast.
The celebrity-laden ads aim to inject some humor and levity into the
year's most-watched U.S. televised event after 11 months of social
distancing and lockdowns.
Longtime advertisers Anheuser-Busch InBev’s Budweiser and Coca-Cola
are sitting out the match-up between Kansas City and Tampa Bay to
fund COVID-19 vaccine efforts or save money.
Their absence makes room for a new roster of advertisers that have
boomed as the world faces a third wave of the health crisis,
marketing experts said.
“I’ve never seen this many first-timers as a percentage of the
advertisers,” said Charles Taylor, a Villanova University professor
of marketing.
Grammy-winning rapper Cardi B will join Wayne and Garth to sing a
jingle and tell viewers to eat locally, kicking off a $20 million
Uber Eats campaign to support independent restaurants.
Logitech, maker of computer keyboards and webcams which consumers
rushed to buy as they worked from home, recruited rapper Lil Nas X
to appear in a spot reflecting how artists have used technology “to
create the future,” set to his newest song.
Some upstart brands found ways to poke fun at rivals while touting
their business model as safer during the pandemic.
In a commercial for Vroom, a man sits strapped to an interrogation
chair as he attempts to buy a car from a traditional dealership. The
online used-car marketplace will tout its home delivery service and
contact-less buying process.
Despite the pause by perennial advertisers, ViacomCBS’s CBS
broadcast network last week said it had sold out commercial time for
the game. A 30-second ad sold for about $5.5 million this year,
about the same as last year, said a person familiar with the matter.
“With bigger names pulling out, it gives us a chance to break
through even more than we expected,” said Peter Scherr, chief
marketing officer at Vroom.
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A still image from
Anheuser-Busch's Super Bowl commercial obtained by Reuters on
February 3, 2021. Anheuser-Busch/Handout via REUTERS
A FINE LINE
While Super Bowl advertisers usually go for laughs or tug at
viewers’ heartstrings, brands are skating a fine line to avoid
insensitive humor - no gerbil shot from a cannon this year - or
further depress sports fans after an emotionally draining 2020, ad
experts said.
Humorous ads are more likely to be uplifting, rather than
“knee-slapping sophomore humor,” said Leeann Leahy, chief executive
of VIA Agency, which has worked on past Super Bowl spots for Johnson
& Johnson and Lowe’s.
Uber Eats competitor DoorDash will air its first game day commercial
featuring actor and rapper Daveed Diggs alongside Big Bird and other
Sesame Street stars, drawing inspiration from the children's show's
focus on the impact of neighbors and local businesses on people’s
lives the last year, said Kofi Amoo-Gottfried, vice president of
marketing at DoorDash.
And although Budweiser will sit out the game for the first time in
over 35 years, the brand's owner, brewing conglomerate
Anheuser-Busch, will air an ad for the first time at the Super Bowl
reflecting its optimism for the end of the pandemic as vaccines roll
out.
The commercial, part of the company's two-year $1 billion economic
recovery campaign, features a montage of people in normal times,
including a woman who offers to buy a beer for her laid-off coworker
and old friends catching up over a drink.
“Everyone is saying, ‘I can’t wait to get together again,’” said
Marcel Marcondes, U.S. chief marketing officer at Anheuser-Busch.
“It’s always more than just grabbing a beer.”
(Reporting by Sheila Dang in Dallas and Uday Sampath Kumar in
Bengaluru; Editing by Kenneth Li and Howard Goller)
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