Every other summer (more or less) I take a big trip- the entire UK in 2013, Greece in 2016, Rome, Pompeii and Capri in 2017, and Ireland in 2022. This year, I'm off to Sicily for an 8-day tour of the island, and will check Etna off my bucket list while visiting Roman ruins, salt mines, and a winery among other sites. May the skies stay clear, the luggage stay unlost and all flights be on time....
1. What is with the comment section of this ad? A black woman comes home from work and is greeted by her husband with liquor and bacon- and? How is this "woke?" No, it's not a "conventional" dinner, but big deal? What's wrong with you people? Is it about a woman being portrayed as the primary breadwinner? Is it about the guy making dinner? You guys know it's the 21st century, right?
2. If this woman wanted breakfast for dinner, why didn't she just go to IHOP? It's always 5 AM there. Oh right- they don't serve whiskey. That IS whiskey she's going to drink with that bacon, right?
In any case- how the hell could anyone be triggered by this ad? Someone explain this to me in a way that doesn't make you sound like a deranged lunatic.
This stunningly beautiful young dentist recommends Sensodyne Pronamel Active Shield because it Actively Shields Enamel. No kidding, that's what she says. Oh, and it's a "Game Changer," which is one of those stupid throwaway lines that lost all meaning years ago and just need to please please please go away now and don't come back. I don't even want to know what the game was at this point. I just want to stop hearing that stupid line.
Not that anyone paid any attention to what she was saying anyway. If she were my dentist I'd be eating candy pretty much constantly and washing it down with milkshakes.
I stay at hotels for exactly two reasons: either I'm on my way from one place to someplace else, and I need a place to rest roughly halfway between those two destinations, or there's something I need or want to do nearby that is going to take multiple days and I'd rather not sleep in the park.
In the first instance, the hotel is always going to be in Northern New Jersey or Southern New York, because I'm driving from the DC suburbs to Vermont and I'm sixty years old and my back hurts and the days of driving all day (or all night!) to get the 550 miles is just too much for me so lay off. It's a place off the Thruway for me to recuperate from traffic and avoid driving at night. In the second instance, the hotel is going to be in some city I'd never even think of visiting if I wasn't getting paid to do work in the area- Louisville Kentucky, or Tampa Florida, or Kansas City Missouri. Again, it's just a place to sleep. I didn't even turn on the tv when I was in KC last week. The gym was really nice though, and they kept it open 24/7 for us. Or I'm on a tour overseas- and in those cases the hotels tend to be nice-but-not-too-nice-because budget. But I digress. In all cases, the hotel is just a building with a bed and a pillow and a shower and that's pretty much it.
I don't get these Celebrations of a Hotel I am Excited to Be In commercials. At all. I don't travel so I can stay at a hotel. I stay at a hotel because it's kind of a requirement of travel. These ads always make it look like families take Vacations to LaQuinta Inn or something. Someone to explain this to me, because I find it super-bizarre. Simply put: In my opinion, hotels are necessities that allow you to do the stuff you really want to do. They aren't ends in themselves. Am I wrong? Do these ads make sense to anyone out there?
(Why would I want to donate to provide cars for kids? Should they be driving? I don't want any of these awful children behind the wheel of something that weighs several tons and can move at high speeds, unless they promise to disengage the air bags and refrain from using seat belts at least. Besides, I've seen enough Lexus December to Remember commercials to know that if kids this age want cars, they should just ask their mommy and daddy- errr, I mean, Santa.)
These ads will never be as loathsome on television as Joe Namath pitching terrible health insurance in the guise of "extra" Medicare benefits, but they have to be the most painful ear worm on radio. None of these kids deserved to be exploited by their parents like this, and all of them should be eligible for the Witness Protection Program until they've aged out of being recognizable.
I don't have kids, but I think if I did this ad would make me wish that the offer worked both ways- can I trade the kids in for a car? I mean, "kar?"
...that it's still worth commenting on 11 years after it's release.
1. This kid has a Dad, Mom and Bratty Little Sister from Central Casting. Seriously, why is this a bad commercial and not a bad sitcom?
2. Dad tosses the keys to the Audi and gives his son a look that I can only translate to "get laid tonight." Ok, so dad is ready to be a grandfather? Because I didn't see him tell the kid "there are condoms in the glove compartment."
3. This kid drives to the prom- by himself- looking like he's taken an entire bottle of Viagra washed down with a gallon of Liquid Testosterone. Does he think his father feels this way every time he drives the family LookAtMeMobile to the office? I mean come on, what the hell?
4. The kid is so confident because he drove an Audi to the prom that he sexually assaults the prom queen. I'd say this is So 2013 except it's really So 1983. I mean, this was a problematic message by the turn of the century. In 2013? Come on.
5. The kid himself gets assaulted by the prom king- and then just....leaves. He drives home in the Audi, with a look of triumph on his face. Um, triumph over what? As near as we can tell, he drove dateless to the prom, assaulted a girl, got assaulted, and left. What's he going to do with the rest of his night? I'm guessing he spends it in front of the computer bleating very inflated and not very recognizable versions of his evening to the pre-Tiktok internet. This is inspiring?
5. What, no slow clap? Maybe this ISN'T 1983 after all.