Monday Morning Quarterback Part II

By BOP Staff

February 3, 2009

The new NFL definition of clutch.

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Sean Collier: Movies generally do better when you advertise them.

Jason Lee: New In Town had no one in town watching.

Which is too bad, because I thought that the trailer looked really good. Or maybe I'm just a big softie. Or I like Renee Zellweger. Or both.

Yeah, both.

Reagen Sulewski: That's the theory, Sean, but I'd bet this would have been the exception to the rule.

David Mumpower: This movie proves what I've been saying to Les Winan for years now. No one cares about Vikings fans.

Attention Go Daddy: We're taking our business elsewhere if these commercials keep up.

Kim Hollis: What was your favorite and least favorite Super Bowl commercial? Do you see any movie as hugely benefiting from their ad during the big game?

Max Braden: Year One looks worse as bad as The Love Guru. I'm thinking Michael Cera is going to regret this. The Transformers sequel trailer has everything in it that brought in millions for the first one. This is going to be big. The Hulu ad wins the night just because of Alec Baldwin at his best. I was annoyed by the "It's probably time" one and didn't find it funny at all. Pepsi's SNL ad was brilliant crossover.




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Joel Corcoran: I think I have to go with the the Budweiser commercial with the Clydesdale talking about his great-grandfather coming over to America from Scotland. Some other commercials were funnier (e.g., the Career Builder ad running down how to tell when you hate your job), but the Budweiser ad was a good mix of humor and thoughtfulness. My least favorite were the GoDaddy.com ads, which were even more predictable and unimaginative than last year's ads.

Brandon Scott: I hate discussing the ads, because they have been hyped for several years, and have been terrible for at least seven to ten years. I can't remember the last time an ad airing during the Super Bowl left an impression on me. I usually crack open another frosty or hit the head during the break. I will agree that Year One looks horrific, though. Wow. Stunningly bad. I personally think Jack Black is on the way out. If this ends up being as bad as it looked, coupled with the atrocious performance in Tropic Thunder, wow...I mean, I guess we need to put him back in the sidekick High Fidelity mode. He is a guy I generally like, but respect can be lost faster than it can be earned.

Tim Briody: Hey, dummy.

Sean Collier: *riots on the streets of Pittsburgh*

Scott Lumley: Sadly, I don't get to watch the Super Bowl commercials because my local stations preempts them with Canadian commercials, which leaves me in the very odd place of feeling aggrieved because someone denied me the chance to watch some commercials. I will probably catch them at some point online just to show those mean TV programmers that my inner consumer will not be denied!

David Mumpower: I loved the Jason Statham commercial, even if it was just an update of The Hire and the Cars.com ad had a distinct Wes Anderson vibe. I was also surprised that the G.I. Joe commercial wasn't terrible, because I'm expecting that one to be a train wreck. In terms of commercials that didn't work for me, Year One looks like a cheap rip-off of History of the World Part One, which is a sad statement to make given the lackluster nature of that film. And Fast & Furious is just brutal. Why would anyone start a commercial with Paul Walker delivering a line that poorly? Focus on the action. Never let him talk in the ads. It's just common sense.

Kim Hollis: I don't really think any commercial was *super* memorable, but I liked Mr. and Mrs. Potato Head quite a bit. And the Coke commercial with the bugs was very pretty. I hated the Careerbuilder commercial (and can't understand why people liked it) as well as all the GoDaddy.com stuff. The movies, sadly, didn't really stand out much.


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