Showing posts with label anheuser busch. Show all posts
Showing posts with label anheuser busch. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 13, 2009

Super Bowl 43 Commercials Preview


UPDATE: Click here for live Super Bowl 43 commercials coverage!

The Super Bowl is an extremely momentous occasion. It's the ultimate finale for the National Football League championship. Every year, a record amount of viewers tune in to see the two teams face off. Super Bowl Sunday has become a ritual for many Americans, providing a chance to show off new big screen TV's, take a gamble with the office pool, pig out (Super Bowl Sunday is the second-largest U.S. food consumption day), and watch outrageous things happen during the halftime show. But there's one more aspect of the Super Bowl that attracts a great deal of attention-- the commercials, of course! It's the most important advertising day of the year. So to prepare you for the upcoming onslaught of high-profile ads, I have made a list of some things you should know and other stuff that you can expect.
  • Date: February 1, 2009
  • Location: Raymond James Stadium in Tampa Bay, Florida
  • Who's Playing: Pittsburgh Steelers at Arizona Cardinals
  • Network: NBC
  • Halftime Performance: Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band
  • Cost of a 30-second ad: $3 million
That's right, $3,000,000. Nothing compared to the bailout but c'mon... that's $100,000 a second! The links below lead to pre-released Super Bowl commercials. Be sure to check them out.
  • There will be an ad competition between Monster Worldwide (who have not aired a Super Bowl commercial for four years) and careerbuilder.com
  • Five minutes of Anheuser-Busch. Budweiser, Bud Light, maybe even Bud Light Lime.
  • Coke... (Coke 2) although Pepsi paid a premium to keep them out of the first half.
  • Pedigree dog food will air their first ad ever in the Super Bowl.
  • Bridgestone will sponsor the halftime show and will run two 30-second ads.
  • Cash4Gold, unfortunately, bought a last second slot from NBC
  • Cars.com has a 60-second ad in the second quarter.
  • Doritos will have at least one 30-second ad.
  • The E*Trade baby makes a comeback!
  • Denny's has two spots
  • GE, owner of NBC, will run a spot.
  • GoDaddy: at least one 30-second ad.
  • Hyundai will present two commercials for their Genesis Coupe.
  • Castrol Motor oil
  • Teleflora flower delivery
  • The NFL will air one 60-second spot during halftime.
  • PepsiCo Beverages are sure to make an appearance with their new branding.
  • Audi has a 60-second ad inspired by classic Hollywood chase scenes
  • Movie trailers: Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen, Star Trek, Monsters vs. Aliens, and 2012
  • Heineken
  • SoBe
  • PETA (not)
Last year's slew of ads were quite disappointing. Let's hope Super Bowl XLIII has some better prospects.

For a minute-by-minute update of the Super Bowl commercials, be sure to stop by here. I'll be updating live for the first time. So be sure to visit the TV Ad Guru and voice your opinion on the biggest ads of the year!

Thursday, August 21, 2008

Channel Surfing: Olympic Sponsorships In Question

A recent study called "The Commercial Games" conducted by Commercial Alert and Multinational Monitor (two companies that keep tabs on big corporations) has argued that the International Olympic Committee should drop sponsors whose products include fast food, soda, and alcohol. The groups think that these products do not jive with the Olympics' overall message of celebrating healthy living.

Obviously the main companies under attack are Coca Cola, McDonald's, and Anheuser Busch. Although these companies wouldn't go out of business without Olympic sponsorships, these global brands would be at a significant disadvantage in terms of missing an opportunity to reach a global audience.

Are these types of endorsements really harmfully associated with the Olympic games? Sure, plenty of kids tune in and are exposed to these ads, but the companies in question are so voluminous that children will see their advertising anyway. Even if gold medalists aren't scarfing down Big Mac's and washing them down with Coke, the majority of people who watch the games are.

Yes, the Olympics display the best in physical fitness and health, but the sponsorships being targeted by this study are more than what they produce for consumers. These companies are global brands that help to improve the quality of life and they all have foundations and programs established to better society using their wide ranges of awareness.