San Francisco Chronicle

After hard year, holiday commercial­s get real

- By Tiffany Hsu Tiffany Hsu is a New York Times writer.

For television viewers, the holiday season means commercial­s filled with rosycheeke­d Santas, computerge­nerated polar bears and brandnew cars festooned with big red bows.

But now, at the close of a hard year, the annual advertisin­g blitz includes stark reminders of the coronaviru­s pandemic mixed into the usual images of shopping sprees and festive cheer.

“Let’s deck the halls — over video calls,” says the narrator of a Christmast­hemed Walmart commercial that shows a variety of people in protective masks. A Heineken commercial ends with a tagline that gently acknowledg­es the challenges of celebratin­g in 2020: “Happy Holidays. # SocializeR­esponsibly.”

A melancholy commercial for ChickfilA follows a family of four into the main square of an almost deserted town, where an oldtimer is having trouble getting the holiday lights to come on.

“Seems like everything’s off this year,” says the mom.

The U. S. Postal Service has released a commercial set to a superslow rendition of “I’ll Be Home for Christmas” that shows mail carriers, many of them wearing masks, heroically delivering letters and packages through rain, sleet and snow.

A tearjerker from Texas supermarke­t chain HEB lingers on a visit between a young girl and her grandmothe­r that takes place on either side of a glass door. In a montage sequence of people doing good deeds, the commercial also shows family members preparing boxed meals for nurses and doctors.

“When Texans help Texans, we all shine,” the narrator says.

After more than 270,000 Americans have died of COVID19, and many millions have lost their jobs or found themselves working from home as a result of the pandemic, companies would risk seeming out of touch if they put out commercial­s that were all sleigh bells and hohohos, marketing executives said.

“Our marketing has tried to be respectful and empathetic to what’s going to be a more challengin­g holiday season,” Brad Hiranaga, chief brand officer for General Mills in North America, said in an interview. “COVID has forced us to shift focus to delivering value to consumers. And showing things that are the opposite of the world they’re living in does not do that.”

General Mills has adjusted its marketing so that it appeals to people who are preparing more meals at home and looking for easy, affordable recipes, he added. In addition, he said, the company’s ads must “speak to people who’ve lost their jobs, or are alone and feel disconnect­ed, or are worried about being sick.”

Other companies have favored satirical ads that seize on the “worst year ever” sentiment.

Olivia Colman, star of “The Crown,” gives a wry voiceover performanc­e in a commercial for Marks & Spencer. “What a year,” she says as a bottle of the British company’s seasonal gin fills the screen. “Let’s try to make Christmas a little brighter, shall we?”

Match. com makes a villain out of the year that is about to expire, showing the devil on a promising first date with a woman whose name is 2020.

An Xfinity commercial stars Steve Carell as a Santa Claus who is so fed up that he cuts off his own jolly greeting during a videoconfe­rence with his elves: “You know what? I can’t even fake it. Look, after the year we’ve just had, the usual gifts are just not going to cut it.” Later, he congratula­tes his workers and, by extension, viewers, for making it through a rough patch. “This year has been harder than ever,” he says into a smartphone cam from his sleigh. “And yet, somehow, you all found a way to pull it off.”

Ads for Amazon, Kohl’s and Microsoft home in on the stresses and missed connection­s of daily life during a pandemic by showing canceled dance recitals and notes taped to windows by lonesome neighbors seeking some kind of human connection.

A few companies have turned to nostalgia, as if hoping to hit delete on 2020. Aldi makes reference to decadesold movies like “E. T.” and “Home Alone” in a seasonal marketing campaign, and a Gucci commercial shows a holiday party set during the 1990s.

Hershey produced an altered version of its popular holiday ad, which since 1989 had featured a tingaling bell choir of Hershey’s Kisses. The changes — like the addition of actors — drew the ire of fans who are seemingly weary of the many disruption­s to their lives. The company quickly promised to continue airing the ad in its original version.

Target has put an emphasis on affordabil­ity, said James Fraser, head of strategy for the New York agency Mother, which works with the company.

“The balance we’ve been trying to manage is how to acknowledg­e the realities and challenges of COVID without stripping away the magic of the season,” he said. “How do you maintain that the holidays are a time of togetherne­ss and joy, an opportunit­y to take a breather from the realities of the day to day, without being tone deaf?”

“In the beginning, everyone wanted to show, ‘ Hey, we get it,’ ” Fraser said. “But in the summer, there was a shift toward pretending that nothing was happening. Now, most brands have reached an acceptance of the new normal, the limitation­s on our lives, while still presenting a picture of hope.”

 ?? USPS ?? A U. S. Postal Service ad shows mail carriers heroically delivering letters and packages.
USPS A U. S. Postal Service ad shows mail carriers heroically delivering letters and packages.
 ?? HEB ?? A holiday commercial from the Texas supermarke­t chain HEB lingers on a visit between a girl and her grandmothe­r.
HEB A holiday commercial from the Texas supermarke­t chain HEB lingers on a visit between a girl and her grandmothe­r.

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