This one amuses me quite a lot, it's just so silly:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=78_vOtgdBzk
Hastings Forum
Favourite Adverts
- Derek Jempson
- Posts: 377
- Joined: Fri Jan 17, 2014 6:56 am
Re: Favourite Adverts
Yes, I like all the adverts of that kind - amusing, entertaining and well acted, but why are toothpaste adverts always so naff?
Re: Favourite Adverts
The tooth care adverts often force the viewer into a painful corner and give them a lecture.
They are poorly thought out and make exaggerated claims.
The irritating voice is a real turn-off.
Hair adverts always seem to promote some pseudo-scientific sounding ingredients such as hyaluronic acid, bioactive glycoproteins, or bio-peptides, which are all complete nonsense.
Beauty product adverts usually target women who are vulnerable to flattery and false claims in the belief that a product (a certain 'snake-oil') will restore lost youth.
Slimming adverts also play on fears, the only memorable one was for Nimble Bread:
One of the most iconic adverts of the early 1970s, featuring Nimble girl Emily Jones precariously balanced on a balloon, flying over ludicrously high landscapes, promoting Nimble Bread to the strains of Honeybus' 1968 hit - "I Can't Let Maggie Go". A 1968 hit by British pop combo Honeybus, which featured the line ‘She flies like a bird in the sky’.
They are poorly thought out and make exaggerated claims.
The irritating voice is a real turn-off.
Hair adverts always seem to promote some pseudo-scientific sounding ingredients such as hyaluronic acid, bioactive glycoproteins, or bio-peptides, which are all complete nonsense.
Beauty product adverts usually target women who are vulnerable to flattery and false claims in the belief that a product (a certain 'snake-oil') will restore lost youth.
Slimming adverts also play on fears, the only memorable one was for Nimble Bread:
One of the most iconic adverts of the early 1970s, featuring Nimble girl Emily Jones precariously balanced on a balloon, flying over ludicrously high landscapes, promoting Nimble Bread to the strains of Honeybus' 1968 hit - "I Can't Let Maggie Go". A 1968 hit by British pop combo Honeybus, which featured the line ‘She flies like a bird in the sky’.
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