The Boring Bowl?

  |  February 7, 2002 

Say what you want about dot-com fallout. It was bound to happen; the bubble had to burst. What I miss are those great Super Bowl ads.

A couple of years ago, industry pundits called it "The Dot-Com Bowl." The ads were creative, innovative, slickly produced, and funny as hell. Typically, the room clears to load up on chili and beer, leaving me by my lonesome with the commercials. Not during "The Dot-Com Bowl". To many, the ads were better than the game. Almost everyone can still name at least one good ad from the game.

What the heck happened? A couple days before the game, I asked friends in broadcast to report on the status of ads sold. One told me 20 percent of the space was still for sale. We all know the going rate is astronomical. This year, it was close to $2 million for a 30-second spot in the first half.

How did this year's ads rank? USA TODAY had a panel of 118 adults rank the best ads during last weekend's game, using handheld meters. The results are as follows:

Best Ads

CompanyDescriptionScore
Anheuser-BushRomantic evening goes awry with satin sheets.9.11
Anheuser-BushPet falcon hunts for bottles of Bud Light8.90
Anheuser-BushCedric the Entertainer plays matchmaker8.57
Charles SchwabHank Aaron advises Barry Bonds to retire8.36
Anheuser-BushMinifridge fights BattleBot for Bud Light8.34
Lipton BriskDanny DeVito begins revolt after puppets fired8.27
Anheuser-BushJersey guys encounter motormouth Texan8.23
E-TradeMonkey in musical8.20
Levi'sMan crossing street finds his legs have the moves8.12
Blockbuster VideoPets dance after watching people rent videos8.02

Worst Ads

AdvertiserAdScore
Taco BellTechie shows off steak quesadilla to friends5.42
SubwayJared returns with low-fat message5.32
Pepsi-ColaBritney Spears sings '50s Pepsi jingle in diner5.20
Roche PharmaceuticalsTamiflu commercial for flu medication5.07
Taco BellAuto marketing used to launch food line5.00

Source: USA TODAY, B4, February 4, 2002

You can see the ads yourself, courtesy of IFILM.

The hallway banter at our agency centered around the AT&T teaser campaign unveiled during the game. The ads talked about "mlife" without defining the term. The TV ads were simply tagged with a URL: www.mlife.com.

I watched the game with non-ad friends. They were all vocally frustrated with the ad -- and my profession. Most thought it was a spot for MetLife. There have been several accounts of users inserting the well-publicized link in their browsers. Lo and behold, the server was down.

As advertisers, don't we have a responsibility to consumers? Isn't one of the golden rules to identify yourself in your ads? Why waste people's time? Why be campy? Why risk negative brand reception? Why drive everyone to a Web site? Is it only about traffic, sheer numbers? Doesn't qualified traffic matter anymore? It's ironic that "life without wires" depends on wires. Wires attached to servers that crash. What can the follow up to this campaign possibly be?

MSN posted a list of the best Super Bowl ads ever. Feel free to check out the ads listed as all-time greats and make your own comparisons.

Despite my professional disappointment with this year's game, hey -- I'm a Boston gal. In the end, I put my advertising life aside and enjoyed the home team's victory.

COMMENTSCommenting policy

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Seana

Seana Mulcahy is vice president, director of interactive media at Mullen (an IPG company). She's been creating online brands since before the first banner was sold. Her expertise includes online and traditional media planning and buying, e-mail marketing, viral marketing, click-stream analysis, customer tracking, promotions, search engine optimization and launching brands online. Prior to Mullen, Seana was vice president of media services at Carat Interactive. She's built online media services divisions for three companies and has worked with clients spanning financial, telecom, high-tech, healthcare and retail. Not surprisingly, she has taught, lectured and written about the industry for numerous trade associations and publications.

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