Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Super Bowl ads feature funeral for Mr. Peanut, tears for Google

- By Tiffany Hsu

An audience expected to be around 100 million. Big companies paying as much as $5.6 million for 30 seconds of advertisin­g time. In addition to deciding the National Football League champion, the Super Bowl is the biggest event of the year for TV commercial­s.

For the most part, the commercial­s were light and bright.

Blasts from the past

Nostalgia was an early theme, with companies marketing their products with ads that showed love for the ’80s and ’90s.

Cheetos had the rapper MC Hammer and his zoot-suit-inspired pants in an ad that aimed to popularize the word Cheetle, Frito-Lay’s term for the orange dust the snack leaves in its wake.

Squarespac­e sent Winona Ryder, the Gen X star who has made a comeback thanks to Netflix’s “Stranger Things,” to Winona, Minn., where she was born. Bill Murray, with a sidekick from the rodent family, relived the 1993 comedy “Groundhog Day” for Jeep, and Mountain Dew Zero riffed on the 1980 film “The Shining” with an assist from the “Breaking Bad” actor Bryan Cranston.

A commercial for Avocados from Mexico features Molly Ringwald, the star of “Pretty in Pink” and other ’80s comedies.

The nostalgia mixed with sentimenta­lity. And three simple commercial­s seemed to have left the deepest impression on viewers.

A spot from Google — about the 85-year-old grandfathe­r of a Google employee searching for ways to remember his partner, Loretta — inspired a flood of “I’m not crying, you’re crying” social media posts. New York Life Insurance explored various forms of love using several real couples and relatives, without a celebrity in sight. WeatherTec­h’s commercial focused on the chief executive’s golden retriever, Scout, and the doctors who saved him from cancer.

A stunt ad for Planters

After much hype in recent days, Planters ran a commercial showing the funeral of its mascot, the monocled creature Mr. Peanut. Other brand avatars were at the gravesite, including the Kool-Aid Man and Mr. Clean. After the Kool Aid creature shed a tear, something sprouted in the dirt. And then a baby version of Mr. Peanut sprang to life, squeaking like a dolphin, saying, “Just kidding, I’m back,” and asking for a monocle. The reaction on social media was not kind.

The unusual Planters campaign, which involved the character dying in a car crash, was put on pause last week, after Kobe Bryant died in a helicopter crash. In recent days, its parent company, Kraft Heinz, swapped the position of a Heinz ad with the Planters ad, putting footage of Mr. Peanut’s funeral before a halftime show that was scheduled to include a tribute to Mr. Bryant.

The streamers are here

The New England Patriots quarterbac­k Tom Brady spent this Super Bowl as a Hulu spokesman, saying in a commercial for the streaming service that “it’s time to say goodbye to TV as you know it” before slyly adding, “but me, I’m not going anywhere.”

An ad from the short-form streaming service Quibi, featuring bank robbers who pause to watch a quick show on their phone screens, made one thing clear: how to pronounce “Quibi.” (It’s kwi-bee, not kwee-bee.)

Unity amid diversity

In other Super Bowl ads, Verizon, Sabra and other companies were emphasizin­g — and celebratin­g — what Americans have in common beneath their difference­s. Don’t we all complain about the same things? Don’t we all defy cultural stereotype­s? And don’t we all love hummus?

Those were some of the messages that figured in the sunny portrait of a nation that emerged from the more than 80 commercial­s scheduled to appear during the Super Bowl LIV broadcast.

“We’re at a moment in the country where it’s important that we all contribute to things that unite as opposed to things that separate,” said Diego Scotti, the chief marketing officer of Verizon. “It’s a sensitive point — we’re a big company and we have many, many customers, and our intention is in no way, shape or form to have a political message.”

To fill advertisin­g slots costing as much as $5.6 million for 30 seconds — a high

— New York Life Insurance and Snickers were among the brands with big-budget commercial­s showing a wide variety of Americans embracing their difference­s.

Sabra cast two former contestant­s from “RuPaul’s Drag Race,” Kim Chi and Miz Cracker, making it possibly the first Super Bowl commercial to feature drag queens. One Million Moms, a conservati­ve activist group that recently pushed the Hallmark Channel to pull ads featuring brides kissing each other, circulated a petition demanding that the Sabra spot be removed, to no avail.

Companies were also slipping into other companies’ commercial­s. Pringles paired up with the animated Adult Swim series “Rick and Morty” for an ad filled with horrifying child robots. Tide, which overran Super Bowl 2018 with crossover commercial­s, teamed this year with Bud Light and the Fox show “The Masked Singer.” PopTarts, which featured the flowing hair of Jonathan Van Ness of “Queer Eye” in its commercial, called out Hyundai’s Boston-accented spot “Smaht Pahk” by posting on Twitter: “Pahp-Tahts.”

Politics crashes party

The first of two 30-second ads from President Donald Trump’s campaign, which cost more than $11 million, aired in the first commercial break after kickoff. The spot focused on Alice Marie Johnson, a woman who was serving a life sentence in federal prison on charges related to cocaine distributi­on and money laundering when her case was brought to Mr. Trump’s attention by Kim Kardashian West, the reality television star. Mr. Trump commuted Ms. Johnson’s sentence in 2018.

It was the first Super Bowl to feature national ads from two presidenti­al candidates, and the political tone of the ads has stood out in a broadcast filled with companies trying to avoid sensitive topics the day before the Democratic caucuses in Iowa.

Just before the second half kickoff, the billionair­e presidenti­al candidate and former New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg presented an ad about gun control that featured Calandrian Simpson-Kemp, whose footballlo­ving son died in a shooting in 2013.

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