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thedrifter
02-06-06, 01:04 PM
'Magic fridge' of Bud Light ices an advertising win
By Bruce Horovitz, USA TODAY

Anheuser-Busch's beer sales might be falling flat, but its Super Bowl advertising certainly isn't.

One man hides his Bud Light from guests by having refrigerator disappear behind a revolving wall — but it magically appears in the apartment next door.

For a record eighth-consecutive year, the beer kingpin topped all marketers with the top-rated commercial in USA TODAY's exclusive Ad Meter real-time consumer focus group ranking of the Super Bowl commercials.

The star of the No. 1 ad: a refrigerator stocked with Bud Light with the ability to disappear to keep unwelcome guests from grabbing the brew. The fridge disappears via a revolving wall that, unbeknownst to the fridge's owner, spins it into the adjoining apartment.

For the guys next door, it becomes the "magic fridge" — an idol to be worshipped.

Anheuser-Busch took the runner-up spot with this heart-warming Clydesdale ad.

Another A-B ad finished second: a heart-tugger about a young Clydesdale that dreams of pulling the Budweiser beer wagon.

A-B aired six of the top 10 ads, but had plenty of competition this year. A funny FedEx ad about a cave man trying — but failing — to send the first FedEx delivery via dinosaur finished third.

A Sierra Mist ad with comedian Kathy Griffin as an airport security worker who "beeps" to get a passenger's Sierra Mist, finished fourth.

A-B led the field without being crass. By some measures, this was the Slightly More Tasteful Bowl. The A-B ads that finished in the top three didn't feature sex, undue violence or locker-room humor.

"In the past, a lot of beer ads were about sex and pretty women," says Carli Weber, 22, a Mesa, Ariz., resident who sells fragrances at a Dillard's department store. "But these are funnier; they reach a broader audience — they reach everybody."

Not that this will get her to drink Bud. The former bartender is a Miller Lite loyalist. "I'll drink that no matter what's advertised," she says. "I don't think people change (brands) easily."

A-B was trying, though. "We listened more closely to our male and female drinkers," says Marlene Coulis, vice president of brand management at Anheuser-Busch. "We're continually raising the bar on humor, and you find you can deliver humor and tell our stories in many different ways."

For ad entertainment, tasteful isn't always better, however. It can also mean, well, slightly boring.

Although this was billed as Super Bowl XL (extra large), beyond the A-B ads, many commercials looked a little small. Small in new ideas. Small in big belly laughs. Small in touching the heart.

Two years after Janet Jackson bared her breast during Super Bowl halftime — and one A-B ad featured a flatulent horse — perhaps the most provocative image to come from Madison Avenue was a naked sheep streaking through a Clydesdale football game for A-B.

Any sex was, at most, suggestive — and not at all visual.

Even the GoDaddy.com commercial, though overtly sexual, actually showed little more than the snapping strap of a buxom woman's tight tank top. The ad scored poorly with Ad Meter panelists. An Ameriquest ad showed what appeared to be a partially disrobed woman straddled atop another airplane passenger, but it wasn't what it seemed, and not an inch of inappropriate skin was in view.

FedEx snagged third place with a cave man using prehistoric overnight delivery via dinosaur.

The evening didn't come cheaply for the winners — or losers. Each 30-second time slot cost a record $2.5 million — or $83,333 per second. The cost to air a Super Bowl spot far exceeds the cost to create one — even though some of the special effects-laden ads cost upwards of $1 million to make.

Even then, more than 30 advertisers ponied up.

Perhaps the odds were stacked in A-B's favor. As usual, the beer giant purchased the most ad time. It aired nine ads, including one for the beer industry. That gave it three times more ads than the No. 2 buyer, Pepsi, which aired three spots. Most advertisers purchased only one 30-second slot.

A-B has good reason to advertise on the big game. It remains the nation's biggest brewer, owning 50% of the U.S. beer market. But in 2005, AB's volume sales fell 1.8%, to 101.1 million barrels, and it had an 18% earnings drop, its first annual decline since 1995.

An important Super Bowl first: A purely female-targeted ad for Dove skin products scored unusually high. The result could lead to more marketers targeting female viewers in future Super Bowls.

The Dove commercial promoted self-esteem for young girls who might think they should be thinner, prettier, even blond. The ad scored just outside the Top 10.The Dove ad was out of character, in a positive way, for a Super Bowl ad, says Cheryl Levine, 24, a paralegal from Olney, Md. "I think we need more encouragement. Too many people have self-image problems. Why is there so much emphasis on a false notion of what beautiful is?"

Within 10 minutes of the ad airing, 7,000 people logged onto the related website, www.campaignforrealbeauty.com, said Dove marketing head Philippe Harousseau.

Contributing: Theresa Howard in New York, Laura Petrecca in Phoenix and Anne Carey in McLean, Va.

(Chart: How all the ads ranked)
www.usatoday.com/money/ad...-chart.htm

Ellie

thedrifter
02-06-06, 01:29 PM
TiVo Announces Top 10 Viewed Super Bowl Ads
Monday, February 6th 2006 @ 9:40 AM PST

Ameriquest's two commercials lead the pack, based upon DVR company's post-game analysis of user viewing behaviors.

TiVo’s annual post Super Bowl analysis of viewer reactions to the commercials today revealed that, of the dozens of multi-million dollar spots that aired, Ameriquest’s two ads landed at the top of the pack. Also revealed, according to user viewing data, was how a controversial call in the second quarter put actual Super Bowl viewing time on par with some of the commercials.

TiVo, the company said, did their annual analysis of viewing behavior by analyzing the replay and rewind features on a more than 10,000 household sample of anonymous information. Ameriquest’s two ads – “Friendly Skies” and “That Killed Him” – were first and second respectively among the top ten commercials, followed by Budweiser’s “Streaking Sheep”, Fed Ex’s “Caveman” and Michelob’s “Torch Football” to round out the top five.

Joining the most wanted ads was the controversial touchdown by Pittsburgh Steelers quarterback Ben Roethlisberger in the second quarter, as well as the “Gadget Play” touchdown by the Steelers later on in the game. Both plays were on average watched more than four times by TiVo households.

One other interesting statistic of note was that, on average, TiVo households hit replay, pause or rewind around 100 times during the Super Bowl broadcast. The replay feature alone was accessed on average of 30 times.

"Our annual analysis of Super Bowl commercials shows once again that if you want to get the audiences attention during the game, you've got to get them laughing," said Katie Ho, Vice President of Consumer Marketing at TiVo, in a statement. "Literally all of the ads in replayed most often in TiVo households utilized humor to deliver their brand message. And TiVo viewers were able to tickle their funny bones again and again without missing a single second of the action on the field."

Ed Palmer
02-06-06, 03:08 PM
http://video.google.com/superbowl.html

yellowwing
02-06-06, 03:25 PM
Hey thanks for the link Ed! Those really are some beautiful horses. Yeah that goat is really nasty, and I am way over priced for a Cadillac SUV! :banana: