On Thursday, I picked up the phone and it was Al Jazeera, seeking my commentary on the Super Bowl ads.
“Gotta put you on hold,” I said. “I’ve got E! on the other line
asking me about the Egyptian constitution.”
Okay -- that’s not what I said, although I would have if I'd thought of it. What I said was simply: “No thanks. I just don't
talk about the Super Bowl anymore.” Because I did it for 25 years. Because I answered the same obtuse questions for 25 years. Because before broadband streaming when the p.r. calculus was
different, extracting the ads from brands in advance was like trying to obtain the D-Day plans -- a gruesome process rewarded in most years by 30-some extravagant and terrible commercials.
It
left scars. Plus, the wake-up call for Good Morning America is 5 a.m. Life is too short.
But wait a second… Al Jazeera? It was an Egon Spengler moment, the crossing of cultural streams.
Total protonic reversal. Dogs and cats living together. Total chaos. Here was the only news channel that actually reports news sucked already into the vortex of The Greatest Non-Story Ever Told.
What did it mean? Would I regretsending regrets?
Nah.
Turned out the Super Bowl advertisers gave us two Bob Dylan songs, two Greek yogurts, one felatus interruptus and about $10 million worth of some guy named Ian Rappaport. (Ian,
you may now return to selling Long Island billboard space in obscurity. In a year or so, when Gwen Dean realizes online puppet-sales on her
GoDaddy Web site weren’t worth quitting her job over, maybe you can take her out for a limo ride and a Bud Light.)
The ads were slightly more entertaining than usual, and approximately
as off-message as usual. Note to Audi: don’t use grotesque Dober-huahuas or anything else to advertise against compromise. Your brand is
about compromise. You also have to feel for both Maserati, which spent $1000 Sunday for every car it sold in the U.S. last year, and Kia. Kia is trying to sell you a $65,000 luxury car that looks
like a Maserati Ghibli -- when you can spend the same $65,000 and get the Ghibli. And Maserati is selling a $65,000 car that looks just like a
Kia. Good luck to both of you.
In short: a typical Super Bowl, with $200 million-plus ad dollars mainly squandered. The blowout on the field and the screwed-up Fox audio didn’t help, but
-- with the possible exception of GoDaddy’s amazing on-air job resignation -- nothing much distinguished itself anyway.
And as I watched this all unfold, the protonic reversal hit me.
There’s no need to go through this anymore. All we need is one composite Super Bowl spot containing all the elements seen on Sunday’s game and about the past 30 years’ worth. I call
it “Heroes.”
SOUNDTRACK: Aaron Neville singing the Battle Hymn of the Republic.
VOICEOVER: “When you are a heroic hero defending our freedom, you never
know what awaits your next footstep.”
ACTION: An American soldier is on patrol, somewhere dusty, in slow motion. He enters a cave, weapon in hand, and finds streaks of dusty light
illuminating his path. He turns to his left, squinting against the darkness until two figures come into focus. It is Dennis Rodman playing gin rummy with a chimpanzee.
CHIMP: “Eee eeee
eeee.”
RODMAN: “Peace, baby.”
SFX: Record scratch. CUT TO:
ACTION: At a resort pool, two knuckleheads leer over their sunglasses as a bikini-clad babe emerges
from the water in super-slow motion, her wet suit clinging to her every contour.
VOICEOVER: “Some guys have all the breaks.”
ACTION: One of the knuckleheads removes his
shades and is revealed to be NY Giants quarterback Eli Manning, who strides confidently in the babe’s directions. She smiles and offers bedroom eyes, but glides right past him to share a chaise
with the chimpanzee, who is wearing Eli’s sunglasses.
ELI MANNING: “Hey, I say something self-deprecating here!”
FADE OUT, FADE IN
VOICEOVER: In a world when
not everything goes right, hope is just a jump away. Meet the Para-para Team.
ACTION: Two wheelchair-bound men and a woman tumble out of a plane, open their chutes and perform astonishing
aerobatics till they land at a rustic barn. Wheeling inside they find a grizzled rancher, welling up with tears because his Clydesdale is struggling to deliver a foal in super-slow motion.
RANCHER: Can you help?
ACTION: The Team all shut their eyelids and nod. CUT TO: foal standing up on shaky legs and shaking off horse amniotic fluid in ultra slow-motion. The Team does
wheelies. The rancher pulls out a wireless remote key and starts the ignition of a heavy-duty truck.
RANCHER: I expect you folks won’t be parachuting back up to go home. CUT TO:
New truck. DISSOLVE:
ACTION: The soldier from the first scene sits thoughtfully on a military plane in his dress uniform.
VOICEOVER: It’s been a hard and heroic tour, but Staff
Sergeant Mickey Smith is finally coming home.
ACTION: The plane’s door is open. Smith is on the rollup stairs. He sees his family across the field and rushes down the steps. His
5-year-old son breaks away from his Mom and runs across the tarmac. The soldier drops his duffel and reaches down. The little boy stops, looks poignantly back at Mom and kicks Dad in the balls. CUT
TO:
Chimpanzee, next out of the plane in a sailor’s suit, eating, driving or using the advertised brand.
MUSIC TRACK: “…..The truuuuuth goes mar-chinnnng
onnnnnnnnnn.”