NEW YORK (AP)Advertisers bet big that Americans were turning to the Super Bowl for a comforting escape, and delivered a series of advertisements that relied on familiar celebrity faces, light humor, and plenty of cuddly dogs.
This wasn’t a year for edgy humor or experimentation. After the global pandemic, with economic uncertainty looming ahead and the war in Ukraine stretching on, advertisers just wanted viewers to feel good.
And it worked.
“This year’s ads took a very light touch and focused on being fun and making the viewer feel good,” said Charles Taylor, marketing professor at Villanova University. “Most followed a clear formula of combining A-list celebrities with humor, with some using nostalgia and/or music to good effect.”
Super Bowl advertisers each year try to reach the more than 100 million people tuning into the broadcast. It’s a pricey proposition: ads can cost as much as $7 million for 30 seconds.
It was a year of change for the Super Bowl since other alcohol ads were allowed to air after
and the halftime show sponsor
STARRY NIGHT
Many of the ads were released early but there were still some surprises in store for viewers. In its first Super Bowl ad, Dunkin’ Donuts enlisted superfan
.
In the ad, Affleck mans the drive-through booth at a Dunkin’ Donuts in Medford, Massachusetts with a Boston accent and shocks customers. Lopez comes through the line of cars and asks him what he’s doing. “You’re embarrassing me in front of my friends,” he says. “Grab me a glazed,” she demands. Affleck has a long association with the brand, and is often spotted carrying Dunkin’ Donuts drinks in paparazzi photos. He directed the ad, too.
GM and Netflix enlisted Will Ferrell to tout their deal to show
. Bud Light’s ad showed
and dog Bugsy, who all dance to hold music. Melissa McCarthy
for Booking.com, and Adam Driver makes
for Squarespace. Pepsi Zero Sugar hired Ben Stiller and Steve Martin.
enlists Anna Faris for one of the few slightly risque ads this year that envisions a present where everyone is naked – including the Statue of Liberty. Tennis star Serena Williams stars in two ads: one for
and one for Remy Martin. T-Mobile
to star in a blooper-filled ad.
One unusual star: a group of donors
in a campaign called “He Gets Us.”
And U2 ran an ad announcing its Las Vegas residency that showed unidentified orbs floating over cities. One of the orbs has a baby in it who says “Achtung!”. U2′s shows are opening up a venue called MSG Sphere, so the orbs make sense. But coming the same day the U.S. announced it
, the images of orbs floating over cities struck a jarring tone.
NOSTALGIA FEST
Many marketers tried to capitalize on well-loved TV and movie properties. This year, online shopping site Rakuten hired Alicia Silverstone and Elisa Donovan to
Popcorners, a snack brand from Frito-Lay,
which first aired in 2008, with stars Bryan Cranston and Aaron Paul.
Other advertisers trying to capitalize on favorite content from years past: T-Mobile’s ad showed John Travolta singing a
of “Summer Nights” from “Grease” with “Scrubs” stars Donald Faison and Zach Braff. Michelob Ultra evoked “Caddyshack” by setting its ad at the
that’s in the movie.
LIGHT HUMOR
Those not using celebrities opted for humor. Kia
to pick up his child’s forgotten “binky.” And E(asterisk)Trade
: this time, they attend a wedding. Some ads were offbeat: a Tubi ad showed giant blue rabbits throwing people into holes to demonstrate the idea that Tubi helps people “find rabbit holes you didn’t know you were looking for.”
Ram’s ad went slightly risque and poked fun at erectile dysfunction ads by having couples talk about “premature electrification.” Villanova’s Taylor said that approach just might work.
“Given the turn the Super Bowl has taken away from sexual appeals or humor over the past decade this will make the ad stand out and generate buzz,” Taylor said. “While they are risking offending some consumers I think the ad will be well remembered and mostly well received.”
CUTE ANIMALS
It’s not a Super Bowl without cute animals – particularly dogs.
Jeep stuffed a bevy of animals, including meercats, a bee, a bear, a goat and many others, in its ad that shows the
emanating from a Jeep 4xe. The dog food subscription service called The Farmer’s Dog showed a
.
Other ads feature dogs alongside celebrities: a Skechers ad shows
; Pringles shows Meghan Trainor cuddling with her dog and Pepsi Zero Sugar shows
operating on a dog. Amazon’s ad shows a family getting a puppy companion for their older dog.
STUNTS
Advertisers sometimes try stunts to capture attention. The biggest one this year was from FanDuel, which enlisted former NFL player Rob Gronkowsi to try to kick a field goal live during the broadcast.
If he made it, customers who wagered at least $5 on the Super Bowl were to get a share of $10 million in free bets. But the problem with stunts is they’re risky. FanDuel caused confusion with its ad, which appeared to show Gronkowski making the kick. But FanDuel said he missed but announced
in free bets.
More successfully, Peacock’s late-game ad tried a stunt by
. The concept behind its show “Poker Face” is that Charlie, played by Natasha Lyonne, can tell when someone is lying. The ad shows Lyonne watching the game with a companion at a bar. She tells him that the M&M’s characters “never left” and a kid in the Google Pixel ad is actually 19 — both references to ads that aired earlier in the game. Peacock says it created the ad in partnership with Google and M&Ms.