I watched the Super Bowl not only as a huge Colts fan, but also as someone who loves to critique the creative marketing. While the Colts took a pounding from the Saints, women seemed to take the beating between plays during the coveted commercial time.
While there were definitely bright moments in the ads , like the Doritos commercial, where the little boy slaps his mother’s new boyfriend across the face and says “Don’t touch my mama, don’t touch my Doritos,” the overall trend I noticed was far more disturbing – that of bashing and degrading women.
Grandmotherly Betty White was tackled to the ground in a Snicker’s commercial and a short while later Tim Tebrow tackled his mother during the controversial Focus on the Family ad. Men were told that buying a Dodge Charger was the last stand against women dominating their lives and then there are the GoDaddy ads, which are just blatantly trying to sell mediocre Web hosting using sex.
I’m a woman AND a football fan. I know that the vast majority of the Super Bowl ads are not targeted to my demographic, but I couldn’t help but sit and wonder what the sentiment was in the creative agencies this year that determined these were the best ads. Maybe it says something that the best commercials in my mind were those created by Doritos fans, not by major ad agencies. Fresh ideas and fresh content, not more of the same.