Role: Person Who Is Way Too Physically Attractive to Actually
Use This Product
Synopsis: There's a vague narrative about broken-down cars and
white people dancing, but it's lost in the quasi-Japanese bizarreness
of the whole spot. Also, "Pringles: The Fever Reliever?"
We're wary of any product that could share a tagline with Junior
Strength MOTRIN.
Bottom Line: Sex sells, and if sexy people like the soon-to-be
Brad Pitt use a product, why shouldn't we? If only we lived in
advertising land, where eating greasy chips led to slow-motion
gyrations with sun-kissed members of the opposite sex. Instead,
all we got was this damned deep-seated self-loathing.
Bonus Moment: The high-pitched screeching of "We've got
the fever for the Pringles!" halfway through will haunt your
dreams for weeks to come.
#9. Matt LeBlanc for Heinz Ketchup
Role: Joey Tribbiani
Synopsis: A young, struggling actor with limited range and no
visible means of support tries to impress women by dripping condiments
off his apartment roof.
Bottom Line: Besides providing further evidence that Joey Tribbiani
is a real person and "Matt LeBlanc" is merely an elaborate
tax shelter, this commercial proves another theory of ours: Glass
ketchup bottles are the worst, most outdated invention, ever.
Should it really take five stories of gravity to get a single
drop of ketchup?
Bonus Moment: The flirtatious/creepy wink at the end, soon to
develop into a catchphrase that we refuse to repeat here.
#8. Elijah Wood for Pizza Hut
Role: One-Fifth of the Implausibly, Clumsy Suburban Family
Synopsis: No matter how hard lil' Elijah's dad tries, he just
can't cook those hamburgers! They just come out small, shriveled
and unsatisfying! Oh man, I bet that's coming up in the divorce
hearings! If only they'd tried this exotic "peet-zah"
instead.
Bottom Line: This ad resorts to a tactic typically seen in infomercials:
Make your product's alternative/competition look so inhumanly
hard, that to not buy your product would border on heresy. However,
since most Americans know how to take a shower or how to cook
a burger without losing a limb, Wood and his family just end up
seeming criminally incompetent.
Bonus Moment: The family dog's bizarre, fang-baring cameo at
about 16 seconds.
#7. Sarah Michelle Gellar for Burger King
Role: Cute Little Girl Who F-ing Hates McDonald's
Synopsis: A cute Sarah Michelle Gellar discovers that McDonald's
uses a pennyweight's less meat in its burgers than Burger King.
Outraged, she sets out to inform the world, armed with only her
crayons and a national, multiplatform marketing campaign.
Bottom Line: We have no idea why advertisers think a lisp and
pigtails equals credibility. It's great that, between naptime
and recess, kids like Gellar find time for consumer activism.
But, do we really trust the market research of someone who just
recently learned full-bladder control?
Bonus Moment: The burger comparison chart's adorably informative
backwards "e."
#6. Keanu Reeves for Corn Flakes
Role: Mischievous Caterer (the best kind)
Synopsis: A young Keanu Reeves is stuck in a dead-end job, catering
banquets for the leisure class. Only two things sustain him: His
love of interpretive dance and how pissed those bourgeoisie cocksuckers
will be when they find their caviar replaced with corn flakes.
Bottom Line: We're sorry Keanu is a wage slave whose only joy
is mischievously stealing bites of cereal, but it still doesn't
make us want to buy Kellogg's bland crap flakes. We refuse to
eat anything that can't hold its own in milk for more than 10
seconds.
Bonus Moment: Keanu's last-minute check to make sure the coast
is clear before guiltily indulging in a spoonful of dry cereal.
#5. Paul Rudd for Super Nintendo
Role: The "Cool" Early '90s Teen
Synopsis: Thanks to the infamous "Care Bear Backlash"
of the late '80s, by the time 1990 rolled around, anything marketed
to kids had to be "edgy." Here, the notoriously family-friendly
(read: "square") Nintendo enlists a young Paul Rudd
to shake up that wholesome image for their latest product, the
"Nintendo Super-Happy, Fun-Time Game Box" (working title).
Bottom Line: Considering Rudd hasn't dropped below four levels
of ironic detachment since 1995, his wide-eyed amazement at his
surroundings (Trench coats! Smoke machines! SimCity!) seems less
than sincere in retrospect. It's not exactly Rudd's fault, either-even
to our young, pre-Clueless eyes, this ad stunk of cheese.
Bonus Moment: The cryptic "New Zelda and Football to come"
disclaimer at the end of the ad.
#4. Meg Ryan for Aim Toothpaste
Role: Gummy Cheerleader
Synopsis: Meg Ryan's cheerleader friends give her a an old-fashioned
razzing over her "fancy" mint-flavored toothpaste, until
it is revealed that Meg's good oral hygiene has apparently nabbed
her a date with the dreamy Jack Reid. (Not revealed in the commercial:
Meg puts out like a wolf in heat.)
Bottom Line: So, girls who use mint toothpaste are easy. Whatever.
We still pity an era where women's locker rooms were portrayed
as places of sweaters and serious conversations about fluoride,
and not the misty, slow-motion fantasies we now know them to actually
be.
Bonus Moment: "My dears, this is serious toothpaste."
Enough said.
#3. Seth Green for Nerf
Role: A Radical Dude
Synopsis: Despite the best efforts of Seth Green's haircut, Nerf
guns are still pretty much the coolest things, ever.
Bottom Line: This ad makes it scarily apparent that it's now
2007 and Seth Green has not yet hit puberty. Also, from the smokin'
fashions to the "NOT!" fake-out, it's a great start
to our next article, "Things We Pretend Not To Remember About
the Early '90s."
Bonus Moment: Mandatory Kids' Commercial Trope No. 23: Before
all's said and done, a representative of the adult world must
be taken down in a suitably humiliating fashion. Here, a mime
falls into a pond. Man, does Nerf get kids, or what?
Synopsis: Lawdy, mastuh, sho' is hard being a po' ol' telephone
repairman. Good thing 'dis mouthwash is such a powerful concoction!
Now, who wants some of Aunt Jemima's pancakes?
Bottom Line: So the message is that even if something tastes
bad, it can be good for you? We had no idea! Thank goodness Listerine
commissioned such an informative and non-condescending minstrel
show to get the message across.
Bonus Moment: The other guy's closing non-committal grunt of
a response to Freeman's twisted, mouth-cleansing logic.
#1. Bruce Willis for Seagram's Golden Wine Coolers
Role: Embarrassingly Over-Enthusiastic Guy Who Breaks Into Song
and Dance
Synopsis: It's a classic commercial set up-this product is so
great, that the mere thought of using it causes people to start
hollering and gyrating like epileptics. Here, a pre-Moonlighting
Willis stars as a good ol' boy who loves his wine coolers so much,
that he and his jug band have to start an impromptu porch-front
jam session.
Bottom Line: Ignore momentarily that Seagram's prize beverage
will be a pop-culture punch line for years to come. Instead, focus
on Bruce's slurred, "authentic-drunk" performance, which
allows him to deliver the inexplicable tagline "It's wet
and it's dry" with complete conviction.
Bonus Moment: If you look closely, tipsy Bruce Willis actually
takes a swing at the guitarist 20 seconds in, and then tries to
pass it off as a pirouette.
Bonus commercial: Hugh Laurie for Polaroid
Warning: The volume is REALLY LOUD compared
to the other videos