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LOS ANGELES >> Has video killed the Super Bowl ad?
If ever there were a Super Bowl that needed a bunch of surprising, cool and smartly written commercials, it was Super Bowl LIX. As Philadelphia systematically destroyed Kansas City on Sunday, Eagles fans were no doubt too … ebullient to pay much attention to the ads, while Chiefs supporters no doubt spent the commercial breaks bargaining with God or dousing themselves with Arthur Bryant’s Barbecue Sauce for luck.
For the rest of us, well, let’s just say it would have been nice to find some distraction from a really funny and/or powerful ad or two.
Alas, it was not to be. With a few notable exceptions — Nike’s “So Win” spot, which pushed back against the “no win” situation in which female athletes are often trapped, was terrific, as was Kieran Culkin’s sassy voice work as a beluga whale for NerdWallet — this year’s Super Bowl commercials did not live up to the hype.
And that hype may be part of the problem.
In the last two decades, Super Bowl commercials have taken on a life of their own, competing for next-day water cooler/internet anointment as fiercely as the two teams taking the field.
Long before Taylor Swift began dating Travis Kelce, these spots became a way of drawing in nonfootball fans: Get snacks and go to the bathroom during the game, come back to catch the debut of the most expensive, and occasionally most creative, commercials on television.
Increasingly, however, it is not their debut. After the phenomenal success of Volkswagen’s 2011 “Star Wars” themed spot “The Force,” advertisers began dropping their Super Bowl ads before the big game. Media outlets, which already offered “reviews” of the spots, began providing “sneak peaks” and early best/worst rankings or lists of whom/what to watch for.
This year, you didn’t have to watch Super Bowl LIX to see Meg Ryan and Billy Crystal revisit their famous deli scene from “When Harry Met Sally” for Hellmann’s Mayonnaise, or watch Catherine O’Hara and Willem Dafoe emerge as pickleball champions for Michelob Ultra or even catch the crossover Matt Damon/Ben Affleck joke between Dunkin’ and Stella Artois.
But the advertisers, it seems, have begun to believe their own publicity. As if the fact that they had nabbed a Super Bowl spot (or two) and a few famous faces guaranteed success.
Largely conceived and produced amid the uncertainties of an election year, many of Sunday’s ads settled in the safe space of nostalgia. In addition to Ryan and Crystal’s throwback for Hellmann’s, Seal (as an actual and rather frightening seal) sang a modified version of his 1994 hit “Kiss From a Rose” for Mountain Dew’s Baja Blast; Instacart unleashed Mr. Clean, the Jolly Green Giant and the Kool-Aid pitcher; and 11 years after they starred in the first season of “True Detective,” Matthew McConaughey and Woody Harrelson reunited for Agentforce.
Watching the ads play out in their intended habitat — the Super Bowl — it was difficult not to wish that the advertisers had taken their own messaging to heart. That, as in the good old days, they had worried less about multiplatform promotion of the commercial and more about making the commercial good and memorable.
Surprise certainly would have helped, particularly for the more unusual offerings — Barry Keoghan going full “Banshees of Inisherin” while pitching laptops at unsuspecting Irish folk for Squarespace, Jeremy Strong “getting into character” by submerging himself in a barrel full of wet coffee beans for Dunkin’ — but in the end, most of the spots, which sold for an average of $8 million, relied on famous faces over clever conceits and sharp writing. (Both Seal’s Mountain Dew ad and Coffee-Mate’s Cold Foam spot, which featured a contorting life-size human tongue, no doubt seemed funnier and less disturbing in the pitch meeting.)
There were so many stars — including, in addition to those mentioned above, Walton Goggins, Kevin Costner, Harrison Ford, Chris Pratt, Chris Hemsworth, Issa Rae, Glen Powell, Adam Brody, Greta Gerwig, Nate Bargatze, Aubrey Plaza, Michael Shannon, Bad Bunny and Bill Murray — that they quickly ceased to make an impact.