I know that all of these Not Available in Stores product commercials have to show people being incredibly inconvenienced by entirely trivial situations- after all, if we actually NEEDED any of this stuff, it would have been invented decades ago-but there's something positively delightful about seeing people having what looks like seizures caused by needing to hold a paper plate overloaded with food. Seriously, is this a problem that anyone considers so serious that they'd rather walk around with a plate of food impaled by a bottle? You still need to stop eating if you want to take a drink (I really wanted to see at least one kid dump that food all over himself when he forgot that his bottle was holding the plate and he just titled the whole thing toward his mouth.)
But hey, it made some old guy's tailgating experience the greatest ever, so there is that. Let's toast the Amazing Dumbness that is the Go Plate. Just don't forget to take the thing off the bottle first.
"Have you ever had legs? How about feet? Then you need this product to deal with those problems." Ok then.
"The movement provided by the Legxersize moves the stagnant blood from your feet back to your heart..." and that's a good thing? I want stagnant blood in my heart? Why?
If you spend a lot of time sitting at a desk, sitting on a couch, sitting on a chair- in short, not using those legs and feet which are the focus of this ridiculous non-exercise exercise device, I guess it's a good idea to try to keep those feet and legs moving just a little bit to prevent clotting. But all you really need is a tennis ball in a shoebox- just roll the ball around with your foot as you sit. There, I just saved you however much money this dumb piece of junk costs. Even the shipping is free. You're welcome.
So the whole Law and Order tie-in is NOT a desperate cash-grab by two minor celebrities who see their careers coming to a swift end. It's a way of making a super-clever point about it being a "crime" to pay for car repairs because you didn't listen to Vivica Fox and Tracy Marrow and buy the non-insurance the pitch in their ads. Got it.
And how exactly does the whole CarShield business model make it such a reprehensible scam? Let us count the ways:
1. The ads manipulate language to tell the listeners what CarShield wants them to hear but not what CarShield does NOT want them to hear but which covers their butt legally. We hear over and over again how "covered repairs will be covered" and buyers of CarShield "will never pay for covered repairs again." Well, no duh. But thousands of people will ignore the word "covered" and just hear "repairs" and "never pay." And if viewers of limited means aren't already anxious enough,
2. The ads play on the economic insecurity of their audience. Every time you turn the key, you might hear a strange noise that means that you are about to spend $$$$ you don't have on the thing that you need to get you to your job and make money and pay the bills. Every time you go out on the road, you run the risk of sustaining damage to your car that you can't pay for and that's the ball game, your whole life has been turned upside down and you are basically screwed. So here are a bunch of people with first names and single initials for last names to tell you how much they "saved" by getting CarShield. Which leads us to...
3. CarShield never tells us the price of their "service," because they don't want viewers to factor that in to the risk of having to pay for a car repair. A "basic" CarShield contract will run you $100 a month. You can get "gold"-level coverage for $140 a month. Remember, this is for a WARRANTY. It is not INSURANCE, which you still have to pay for separately, hopefully from a company that is not run by con artists like CarShield. So let's pretend that there really is a guy out there who had a $2K car repair actually covered by his CarShield Warranty. He certainly had the "gold" membership. But if he paid the premiums on that policy for more than fifteen months, that warranty cost him more than the repair would have. $140 a month placed in a bank account for fifteen months would have netted him a $100 surplus after paying for that repair out of pocket. Oh, but what if he needed the repair after SIX months? Well, that still would only save him $1160, not $2k. But this is all a moot point, because....
4. CarShield's thirty-page warranty agreement- which I'm guessing nobody reads- is chock-full of legalese which explains to the customer why they shouldn't even bother calling when they want to file a claim (I've heard stories from people who can't get anyone on the line for "24/7" towing service, or if they can, are told to pay out of pocket and "file for a refund.") CarShield is very good at using phrases like "engine repair" while excluding specific parts which are needed to effect engine repair. It's the reason why many mechanics refuse to accept CarShield (and why CarShield is actually BANNED in some states, like California.) It's deceptive but legal because it's right there in paragraph 4 of page 22 Sorry You Didn't Read It Sorry No Refunds.
Look, extended warranties- which is what CarShield, HomeShield, etc. etc. offer- are all scams. Every one of them. This is just maybe the very worst because it doesn't target homeowners who probably have a bit of financial leeway because after all they own a house. I'm quite certain that the vast majority of customers drawn in by these disgusting ads are renters, minimum-wage workers, single parents and elderly people on fixed incomes. They can't afford your non-product, CarShield. Stop taking advantage of loopholes in our ridiculously lax Truth in Advertising Laws. Or just keep paving that road to hell, where if there IS a god you'll be joined by Big Gambling when your time comes.
This guy lives in an enormous house with an enormous kitchen and has purchased all the ingredients he needs to make himself a pizza. But he experiences a few seconds of inconvenience trying to get the jar of sauce open, so....all that planning gets tossed aside in favor of hitting the Dominos Pizza App on his phone and just getting a generic pile of bland warm garbage delivered to his house instead.
Why was this guy even trying to make his own pizza if he already had the Dominos App? Did he get the notion that he might actually like to eat a real pizza with actual flavor? Does he have a significant other who asked him to please please please just COOK something for once instead of greeting him/her/they/zee/zir/dragonself/whatthef-ever with another delightful delivery bag of processed overpriced junk when (insert pronoun here) walks through the door? And this is the level of effort this guy is willing to make? Ten seconds with a jar?
What is he going to do with all those ingredients now? Do they just go into the trash can? Lesson learned- preparing your own food is a waste of time and anti-Capitalism anyway so don't do it, let Big Engineered Food do the work? Ok then...
In 1994, baseball took a major hit in popularity after its second major player's strike in just over a decade. Ironically, it took a steroid-fueled home run race to bring the game back into the public consciousness. The subsequent doping issue ruined a number of careers and will keep several of the players at the top of the home run record list out of the Hall of Fame (Mark McGuire, Sammy Sosa, Barry Bonds, Alex Rodriguez, Rafael Palmeiro...none of these guys are getting in, ever.)
Baseball survived the Black Sox gambling scandal of 1919, probably because it had such limited competition in the world of entertainment and because it seemed to involve only one team.
Today, gambling has become the financial driver of televised sports. Entire pre and post-game programs are sponsored exclusively by gambling programs- FanDuel, SportsKings, etc. ESPN scrolls the odds for pretty much every event almost 24/7. Gambling takes up at least as much of the ad space as alcohol, cars and medications for skin conditions and diabetes. It's a multi-billion dollar industry fueled by an addictive behavior sold to the audience by the most familiar faces in Hollywood and sports itself (David Ortiz, what the hell are you doing shilling this crap?)
Let's be real here. It's only a matter of time before this house of cards comes crashing down with "shocking" news of point-shaving, phantom injuries, bizarre, game-changing plays, mysterious umpire and referee calls, etc. It's only a matter of time before a major scandal We Couldn't See Coming Because We Didn't Want To tars all of professional sports to the point that it can't recover and becomes attractive only to people who like their games as scripted as professional wrestling.
Professional Sports has sold its soul to the drug of unlimited money flowing from the pockets of addicts. Unless the Feds step in and ban gambling apps and the sponsorship of professional sports by gambling houses, the crash is coming, and this time, I don't think pro sports recovers. I think it really will be the end this time. There are just too many non-sports entertainment options out there now.
Pro sports had a great run, but there are only so many times it can sabotage itself for quick profits before it finally kills off that golden goose. Gambling WILL be the destruction of professional sports. Bet on it.
1. You did not want to make this ad. You'd much rather put that money into paying Kevin Hart and Jamie Foxx and ESPN hosts to blather about how SuperAwesomeAmazingFunAndEasy gambling on sporting events is. A "system?" Yeah, the only system you're interested in is the one that provides the App and takes the money.
2. "I set up a one hour a week time limit on FanDuel." First, you have to set this up- it's not the default. The default is to stay on as long as you want. And what happens if you want to go beyond that time limit? Is it just a matter of turning it off like the "Do Not Disturb" option on your phone. I'll give you +400 that it is. That's a joke.
Is an hour a week a long time to be spending making bets? Isn't the whole program super-easy to navigate? If you decide how you want to bet in advance, it seems to me that an hour means a lot of placing of a lot of bets.
3. "I set limits so I only bet what I can afford." Yeah, right. Who decides what a gambling addict "can afford?" Isn't this like trusting a drunk to limit his alcohol consumption? How many smokers successfully "limit" themselves to a certain number of cigarettes per day? And again- how powerful is the "lock" an individual places on his maximum? Is that "limit" just a swipe away from vanishing when the itch becomes too strong not to scratch?
And the image of two men who obviously live in substantial suburban homes, obviously intended to send the message that gambling is something that financially stable, SUCCESSFUL guys do with no impact on their financial stability...ok then.
Come on, FanDuel. There's no safe level of heroin intake. You can't play Russian Roulette "in moderation." The only "safety feature" you can add to your phone is one that prevents gambling apps from being downloaded. Like Thermonuclear War, the only winning move is....not to play.
Lady, you should be thinking of Macros, not Marcos. The last thing you need is another evening of sitting on your couch eating yourself into a carbohydrate coma with cheap delivery pizza. How about hitting the gym before eating a meal made up mostly of protein (and no, the cheese on the pizza doesn't count as protein?) In short, a healthy diet and exercise should be the only "routine" you should be working on. Pizza delivered to your couch should not be a "routine" for ANYBODY.
And buddy? If you really care for this woman, stop being her enabler and encourage her to take steps that will lead her to living a healthier, happier and longer life. Start by deleting the Marco's Pizza app from your phone. And all the fast-food delivery service apps from your phone. You'll both thank me later.