Adverts that make you wanna smash your TV set up. (Vol 2)

Adverts that make you wanna smash your TV set up. (Vol 2)

Author
Discussion

Escort3500

11,982 posts

147 months

Monday 7th October 2019
quotequote all
Gobby American woman on Hilton ad furious

iandc

3,730 posts

208 months

Monday 7th October 2019
quotequote all
Escort3500 said:
Gobby American woman on Hilton ad furious
Agree. God that accent is soooo grating!!i

cuprabob

14,925 posts

216 months

Monday 7th October 2019
quotequote all
Escort3500 said:
Gobby American woman on Hilton ad furious
Not at all, her accent is "pitch perfect" smile

Escort3500

11,982 posts

147 months

Monday 7th October 2019
quotequote all
cuprabob said:
Escort3500 said:
Gobby American woman on Hilton ad furious
Not at all, her accent is "pitch perfect" smile
That rings a Bellas wink

AlexRS2782

8,077 posts

215 months

Monday 7th October 2019
quotequote all
Another awful, breathy, slowed down audio track - this time "the whole world in his hands".

Volvo advertising their eco mode suv's and how it will evidently save the earth for the children of the future.

LuS1fer

41,192 posts

247 months

Monday 7th October 2019
quotequote all
Not sure what it was for or where I saw it but a fat canary with a big pseudo-beard throat and a gee-tar.

Creepy.

Jim the Sunderer

3,241 posts

184 months

Tuesday 8th October 2019
quotequote all
AlexRS2782 said:
Another awful, breathy, slowed down audio track - this time "the whole world in his hands".

Volvo advertising their eco mode suv's and how it will evidently save the earth for the children of the future.
The hypocritical bds, after selling almost exclusively diesels for a decade.

WJNB

2,637 posts

163 months

Tuesday 8th October 2019
quotequote all
TV advertisers are so worried about being accused of racism or homophobia they are shying away from using images of white people and straight couples.
Marketing departments are even putting diversity above relevance to their target audience to avoid accusations of bigotry, a survey of 500 companies has found. The effort made to be diverse actually distracts from the products themselves.
A third of advertisers questioned said they had used fewer white models and heterosexual couples over the past year. More than a third of these said they were taking this approach to “prevent perceived discrimination”.

You can play a fun game when watching an advertisement & especially the 3 main soaps.
A point is awarded every time:
1. A mixed race couple is depicted.
2. 2 members of the same sex are depicted being affectionate with each other.
3. At least one person of colour is included in every crowd or family scene.
4. A person with a mobility issue is shown i.e. a wheelchair or with a prosthetic limb.
5. Any individual who is presenting with some form of mental anxiety issue.

Maximum points & credibility can be earnt by those companies & programmes who have accurately & with due respect reflected the profile of this countries population mix.
Observing this should NOT make you want to smash up your TV but be immensely grateful every minute & hour of the day that we live in such an enlightened & tolerant country.

iandc

3,730 posts

208 months

Tuesday 8th October 2019
quotequote all
WJNB said:
TV advertisers are so worried about being accused of racism or homophobia they are shying away from using images of white people and straight couples.
Marketing departments are even putting diversity above relevance to their target audience to avoid accusations of bigotry, a survey of 500 companies has found. The effort made to be diverse actually distracts from the products themselves.
A third of advertisers questioned said they had used fewer white models and heterosexual couples over the past year. More than a third of these said they were taking this approach to “prevent perceived discrimination”.

You can play a fun game when watching an advertisement & especially the 3 main soaps.
A point is awarded every time:
1. A mixed race couple is depicted.
2. 2 members of the same sex are depicted being affectionate with each other.
3. At least one person of colour is included in every crowd or family scene.
4. A person with a mobility issue is shown i.e. a wheelchair or with a prosthetic limb.
5. Any individual who is presenting with some form of mental anxiety issue.

Maximum points & credibility can be earnt by those companies & programmes who have accurately & with due respect reflected the profile of this countries population mix.
Observing this should NOT make you want to smash up your TV but be immensely grateful every minute & hour of the day that we live in such an enlightened & tolerant country.
Do we get extra points for mixed race wool dolls as in the DFS advert?

AlexRS2782

8,077 posts

215 months

Wednesday 9th October 2019
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I guess David Mitchell & Robert Webb have seen their careers go in different directions as Webb appears to be part of an ad flogging Now TV - where he plays the role of the bad reception / connection indoor aerial laugh

Is that a step up or down from when he was the "other" Alexander Meerkat a couple of years ago? hehe

Johnnytheboy

24,498 posts

188 months

Wednesday 9th October 2019
quotequote all
WJNB said:
TV advertisers are so worried about being accused of racism or homophobia they are shying away from using images of white people and straight couples.
Marketing departments are even putting diversity above relevance to their target audience to avoid accusations of bigotry, a survey of 500 companies has found. The effort made to be diverse actually distracts from the products themselves.
A third of advertisers questioned said they had used fewer white models and heterosexual couples over the past year. More than a third of these said they were taking this approach to “prevent perceived discrimination”.

You can play a fun game when watching an advertisement & especially the 3 main soaps.
A point is awarded every time:
1. A mixed race couple is depicted.
2. 2 members of the same sex are depicted being affectionate with each other.
3. At least one person of colour is included in every crowd or family scene.
4. A person with a mobility issue is shown i.e. a wheelchair or with a prosthetic limb.
5. Any individual who is presenting with some form of mental anxiety issue.

Maximum points & credibility can be earnt by those companies & programmes who have accurately & with due respect reflected the profile of this countries population mix.
Observing this should NOT make you want to smash up your TV but be immensely grateful every minute & hour of the day that we live in such an enlightened & tolerant country.
Make up ads now seem to need a male cross-dresser in all of a sudden.

bristolracer

5,570 posts

151 months

Wednesday 9th October 2019
quotequote all
WJNB said:
TV advertisers are so worried about being accused of racism or homophobia they are shying away from using images of white people and straight couples.
Marketing departments are even putting diversity above relevance to their target audience to avoid accusations of bigotry, a survey of 500 companies has found. The effort made to be diverse actually distracts from the products themselves.
A third of advertisers questioned said they had used fewer white models and heterosexual couples over the past year. More than a third of these said they were taking this approach to “prevent perceived discrimination”.
Yet they are still able to portray men as stupid clumsy or sexualize them. But that's ok ?


LuS1fer

41,192 posts

247 months

Wednesday 9th October 2019
quotequote all
bristolracer said:
Yet they are still able to portray men as stupid clumsy or sexualize them. But that's ok ?
Women are sexualised in perfume ads, no beefy ladies in those.

Mcphisto

833 posts

137 months

Wednesday 9th October 2019
quotequote all
LuS1fer said:
Women are sexualised in perfume ads, no beefy ladies in those.
But those adverts are targeted at women. If they used some fat old boiler, women would be "im not buying that, its the stench of fatties and ugly people" whereas using a fit slim model makes them want to smell like the aforementioned hottie.


KingNothing

3,175 posts

155 months

Wednesday 9th October 2019
quotequote all
WJNB said:
TV advertisers are so worried about being accused of racism or homophobia they are shying away from using images of white people and straight couples.
Marketing departments are even putting diversity above relevance to their target audience to avoid accusations of bigotry, a survey of 500 companies has found. The effort made to be diverse actually distracts from the products themselves.
A third of advertisers questioned said they had used fewer white models and heterosexual couples over the past year. More than a third of these said they were taking this approach to “prevent perceived discrimination”.

You can play a fun game when watching an advertisement & especially the 3 main soaps.
A point is awarded every time:
1. A mixed race couple is depicted.
2. 2 members of the same sex are depicted being affectionate with each other.
3. At least one person of colour is included in every crowd or family scene.
4. A person with a mobility issue is shown i.e. a wheelchair or with a prosthetic limb.
5. Any individual who is presenting with some form of mental anxiety issue.

Maximum points & credibility can be earnt by those companies & programmes who have accurately & with due respect reflected the profile of this countries population mix.
Observing this should NOT make you want to smash up your TV but be immensely grateful every minute & hour of the day that we live in such an enlightened & tolerant country.
"The Gym" advert couldn't try any harder if they tried, they've got everybody, was waiting for either a Furry to come on the screen, or someone who was just a torso and a head.

Shakermaker

11,317 posts

102 months

Wednesday 9th October 2019
quotequote all
Another "radio" on that's got my goat lately

I can't even remember what exactly it is advertising, but it is a couple bickering over who has to put the bins out, because they need to put them out to "save the space for their car" - its a car advert I can recall that much.

But it just annoys me that they think people can use bins to reserve their parking space.

CooperD

2,894 posts

179 months

Wednesday 9th October 2019
quotequote all
A TV advert for Voxi with a load of thumbs poncing about on the screen. Complete load of ste.. furious

cuprabob

14,925 posts

216 months

Wednesday 9th October 2019
quotequote all
Shakermaker said:
Another "radio" on that's got my goat lately

I can't even remember what exactly it is advertising, but it is a couple bickering over who has to put the bins out, because they need to put them out to "save the space for their car" - its a car advert I can recall that much.

But it just annoys me that they think people can use bins to reserve their parking space.
I know the one you mean. I think there is a matching TV advert. One radio one that really does annoy me is the Tena one aimed at men.

Saleen836

11,184 posts

211 months

Wednesday 9th October 2019
quotequote all
cuprabob said:
Shakermaker said:
Another "radio" on that's got my goat lately

I can't even remember what exactly it is advertising, but it is a couple bickering over who has to put the bins out, because they need to put them out to "save the space for their car" - its a car advert I can recall that much.

But it just annoys me that they think people can use bins to reserve their parking space.
I know the one you mean. I think there is a matching TV advert. One radio one that really does annoy me is the Tena one aimed at men.
See my earlier post wink
And yes i have now seen it as a tv advert and that is just as annoying

Johnnytheboy

24,498 posts

188 months

Wednesday 9th October 2019
quotequote all
CooperD said:
A TV advert for Voxi with a load of thumbs poncing about on the screen. Complete load of ste.. furious
And as previously mentioned the voice over is nauseating.