I have had some questions about this lately on my blog, so I thought that I would embed a list of the three Groupon ads from the Super Bowl in 2011. These ads are famous (infamous) for their controversial depictions and seemingly mocking attitude towards the Tibetan culture, protecting whales, and deforestation in Brazil. Love them or hate them, they're all here for you to enjoy:
1. Tibetan Culture:
2. Saving The Whales:
3. Brazilian Deforestation:
My analysis: I think that the ideas for these commercials were ones that were probably funny on paper, on the cutting room floor, and all the way up to 10 minutes after they aired in the Superbowl when the ad agency and management for Groupon both had a major "facepalm" moment. The problem here is that there are a certain percentage of people who will find a commercial like any of the ones shown above highly offensive, no matter how well intentioned the commercials were in the first place. Sure, sometimes people get too wound up about political issues (what the commercials were trying to poke fun at) but the delivery here probably only serves to agitate that tension.
Many people are already laughing a little on the inside about, for example, the highly strung environmentalists who take saving the whales as a personal mission in life. The environmentalists, on the other hand, take their work very seriously. So, on the one side, you've got people who already get the inside joke your commercial is trying to tell and have gotten the joke for years(and so probably don't care that much). On the other hand, you have a group of environmentalists, human rights activists who are ready to crucify you for mocking their causes. Does any of this sound like a combination Groupon's advertising team should have touched with a ten foot pole? Not to me.
What do you think about these commercials? Were they harmless fun, in poor taste, or downright offensive? Please leave your comments below.
Showing posts with label superbowl. Show all posts
Showing posts with label superbowl. Show all posts
Wednesday, February 9, 2011
Analysis: President Obama - Bill O'Reilly Interview: Super Bowl Sunday 2010
Here is my analysis of an interested interview between Bill O'Reilly and President Barack Obama from February 2010 during the pregame show for the Superbowl. My comments are below the video.
Overall, I was impressed with the interview. Bill was a bit softer on Obama than he might have otherwise been (especially compared with this interview from 2008) but I thought that he asked just enough tough questions at the first to make the interview interesting. The one question that I wish he would have asked Obama but didn't was about the move by the Obama administration during the first two years of office away from the Bush era policy of challenging dictatorships and promoting democracy around the world. I felt that O'Reilly could have made the point that the U.S. could have been much more active in promoting change in Egypt and other places before 2010 than they ultimately ended up being.
The second part of the interview was refreshingly light. Too often, interviews with the president focus on the difficult political questions faced every day as a part of the job description and on not much else. While I'm not advocating throwing "soft ball" questions to politicians as a matter of course, sometimes it's nice to see the media call back the attack dogs a bit when dealing with these issues. I like that Bill gave Obama a chance to explain how hard the decisions are that he makes on a daily basis. As Obama notes, people have to have a thick skin to survive the election process and become president.
What do you think? Please leave your comments below.
Overall, I was impressed with the interview. Bill was a bit softer on Obama than he might have otherwise been (especially compared with this interview from 2008) but I thought that he asked just enough tough questions at the first to make the interview interesting. The one question that I wish he would have asked Obama but didn't was about the move by the Obama administration during the first two years of office away from the Bush era policy of challenging dictatorships and promoting democracy around the world. I felt that O'Reilly could have made the point that the U.S. could have been much more active in promoting change in Egypt and other places before 2010 than they ultimately ended up being.
The second part of the interview was refreshingly light. Too often, interviews with the president focus on the difficult political questions faced every day as a part of the job description and on not much else. While I'm not advocating throwing "soft ball" questions to politicians as a matter of course, sometimes it's nice to see the media call back the attack dogs a bit when dealing with these issues. I like that Bill gave Obama a chance to explain how hard the decisions are that he makes on a daily basis. As Obama notes, people have to have a thick skin to survive the election process and become president.
What do you think? Please leave your comments below.
Related articles
- Here Are All 48 Times Bill O'Reilly Interrupted President Obama Sunday (wonkette.com)
- O'Reilly To Obama: 'What Can I Do Better?' (huffingtonpost.com)
- A 'Suitably Confrontational' Bill O'Reilly Discusses His Interview With 'Thin-Skinned' President Obama (mediaite.com)
- Bill O'Reilly Defends His Questioning Of How Obama Reacts To Those Who Hate Him (mediaite.com)
- Bill O'Reilly has pre-Super Bowl interview with Obama - Washington Post (news.google.com)
Monday, February 7, 2011
Elizabeth Hurley getting "deforested" by Brazilian wax commercial
Watch this sexy commercial from the 2010 Superbowl of sexy actress Elizabeth Hurley getting "deforested" by a Brazilian wax as part of a series of commercials for Groupon.
Related articles
- Groupon Super Bowl 2011 Commercial, Or Elizabeth Hurley's Ad For Discount Brazilian Waxes (sbnation.com)
- Groupon Pisses Off, Shocks & Offends The World At The Super Bowl (socialtimes.com)
- Groupon Trivializes Deforestation With Female Deforestation (adrants.com)
- Cuba Gooding Jr., Timothy Hutton and Elizabeth Hurley Star in Groupon Super Bowl Ads (shoppingblog.com)
- Groupon Super Bowl ads draw scorn (msnbc.msn.com)
Labels:
2010,
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deforestation,
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groupon,
hurley,
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