Naphtali
Practically Family
- Messages
- 767
- Location
- Seeley Lake, Montana
I have watched no television for about seven years, so I suffer a severe case of arrested development when identifying the most EFFECTIVE television advertisements made. Note I typed "effective" rather than fun or interesting, or glitzy. Stan Freberg habitually won Cleos with his pizza ads. But they were ineffective selling the product. Procter & Gamble's soap, detergent, et al. advertising was incredibly uninteresting but did its job - possibly by wearing down watcher?
And then there are the special ones - memorable, interesting or fun, and incredibly effective. Here are my most effective television advertisements (campaigns).
1. The 1984 Super Bowl spot - a one-time showing - announcing Macintosh computers - by Apple. While shown only once, it is available for download on the worldwide web.
2. Timex watch ads hosted by John Cameron Swayze where watches were subjected to horrendous abuse - such as, being fastened to an outboard motor's propeller, the motor being run for about ten seconds. "Takes a licking and keeps on ticking."
3. Volkswagen (beetle) ads by Doyle, Dane, Bernbach, the most memorable of which was as follows. Be advised that in USA the only all-wheel or four-wheel drive automobiles were Jeeps.
Aerial pan of blizzard. As camera zooms slowly closer, we see headlights snaking along a "road." Burgess Meredith does the voice over (a wonderfully avuncular, reassuring voice) "Have you ever wondered how the man who drives the snow plow gets to the snow plow? The camera, that had been slowly zooming in, rests with full screen shot of a man getting out of a beetle. Meredith completes the ad, saying, "Now you know."
And then there are the special ones - memorable, interesting or fun, and incredibly effective. Here are my most effective television advertisements (campaigns).
1. The 1984 Super Bowl spot - a one-time showing - announcing Macintosh computers - by Apple. While shown only once, it is available for download on the worldwide web.
2. Timex watch ads hosted by John Cameron Swayze where watches were subjected to horrendous abuse - such as, being fastened to an outboard motor's propeller, the motor being run for about ten seconds. "Takes a licking and keeps on ticking."
3. Volkswagen (beetle) ads by Doyle, Dane, Bernbach, the most memorable of which was as follows. Be advised that in USA the only all-wheel or four-wheel drive automobiles were Jeeps.
Aerial pan of blizzard. As camera zooms slowly closer, we see headlights snaking along a "road." Burgess Meredith does the voice over (a wonderfully avuncular, reassuring voice) "Have you ever wondered how the man who drives the snow plow gets to the snow plow? The camera, that had been slowly zooming in, rests with full screen shot of a man getting out of a beetle. Meredith completes the ad, saying, "Now you know."