What Do the Dems Do After They’ve Done Their Worst and It Flops?
Stephen Colbert Hates Black Women and Other Universal Truths
Politico Struggles With Illegal Voters and Censorship Lies
The Church of Talarico
Remembering Rev. Jesse Jackson
AI – AI – O
NBC Poll Finds Declining Support for Trump's Immigration Agenda — Blame NBC
Western Civilization Will Disintegrate Without Truth
Too Big to Fail, Too Big to Care
What Should President Trump Say at His State of the Union on Tuesday?
Why Repealing the Endangerment Finding Is a Triumph for Science, Jobs, and American...
Why Is the Federal Government Fundraising for Political Orgs – and Mostly Benefiting...
DC Mayor Bowser Asks Trump Administration: Help Clean Waste from Potomac River
Former NY Sales Director Sentenced to Prison in $70M Medicare Brain Scan Scheme
Florida, Texas Executives Get 20 Years for $233M Affordable Care Act Fraud Scheme
Tipsheet
Premium

Big Name Companies are Avoiding Super Bowl Ads Over Fear of Striking the Wrong Message

Big Name Companies are Avoiding Super Bowl Ads Over Fear of Striking the Wrong Message
AP Photo/Seth Perlman

Big-name companies are reportedly skipping the Super Bowl this year over fears of striking the "wrong tone" in advertisements during an era where the "wrong tone" can set off a wave of backlash. The fear is more pronounced than ever given the long pandemic, high unemployment, and heightened political tensions. 

Several brands who regularly run ads during the big game have decided to sit out Super Bowl LV given the current environment. 

"For the Super Bowl, you generally go big or go home. I think brands are going home rather than spending tens of millions of dollars and not getting it right. They’re saying, 'let’s wait until this s–storm clears,'" Bill Oberlander, co-founder and executive creative of ad agency Oberlander, told the Post.

Coca-Cola, who has advertised in every Super Bowl since 2006, with the exception of advertising only in the pre-game show in 2019, said the company would be taking a break this year. 

"This difficult choice was made to ensure we are investing in the right resources during these unprecedented times," the company said while explaining its decision. 

The report also notes companies that do stick around are expected to tread lightly given the current environment.

"Every client conversation I’ve had these days is about who is going to be offended by this ad," said Rob Schwartz, chief executive officer of ad agency TBWA\Chiat\Day. "There’s a lot of discussion about risk mitigation. What that tends to do is that it makes things very bland and not effective or it forces you to look at universal topics like hope or humor."

Ford, Hyundai, Olay, Avocados From Mexico, and Little Caesars have all decided to sit out the game this year.

Sports should offer tired Americans a refuge from the issues that divided us, but the NFL and other sports leagues have partnered with woke activists who push a left-wing agenda at a time when many Americans just want to watch a sports game. 

The Super Bowl is known for its commercials. Hopefully, outrage culture doesn't ruin that too.  

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement