I just witnessed the most annyoing commercial

in_hiding79
Posts: 4,315
EVER...it has meatloaf and some kid singing and then Tiffany walks in and starts singing...all about a stupid "go phone".....
I can't stop smiling when it's on though!!!
I can't stop smiling when it's on though!!!

And so the lion fell in love with the lamb...,"
"What a stupid lamb."
"What a sick, masochistic lion."
"What a stupid lamb."
"What a sick, masochistic lion."
Post edited by Unknown User on
0
Comments
-
is that tiffany? did she marry meatloaf?
i just thought it was his wife who came in and started beltin' out a tune.
beyone that...
meatloaf jr. with the 'white man's overbite' and the lipsynching is just fantastic. i mean, i want to kick him in the head, but you can see why he's his dad's kid.0 -
BTW...I'm quite aware that I mispelled "annoying" above!!And so the lion fell in love with the lamb...,"
"What a stupid lamb."
"What a sick, masochistic lion."0 -
chikevin wrote:is that tiffany? did she marry meatloaf?
i just thought it was his wife who came in and started beltin' out a tune.
beyone that...
meatloaf jr. with the 'white man's overbite' and the lipsynching is just fantastic. i mean, i want to kick him in the head, but you can see why he's his dad's kid.
That's his kid?? WOW....:eek:
Shit, maybe it isn't Tiffany...damn, it looks like her though!And so the lion fell in love with the lamb...,"
"What a stupid lamb."
"What a sick, masochistic lion."0 -
tiffany AND the loaf?!?!!? what's not to like?!?!!?
:D
0 -
in_hiding79 wrote:That's his kid?? WOW....:eek:
Shit, maybe it isn't Tiffany...damn, it looks like her though!
it's not his kid and the loaf and tiff (yes it's her) are not married....:eek:0 -
in_hiding79 wrote:That's his kid?? WOW....:eek:
Shit, maybe it isn't Tiffany...damn, it looks like her though!
that said, people are into his dad. why not carry the torch!?!?0 -
That was tiffany? WHoa! I thought that was his son?
Who doesn't like Meat Loaf though? Paradise by the Dashboard Light? Come on!"...like a word misplaced, nothing said, what a waste.."
"Sometimes life should be consumed in measured doses"
6-01-06
6/25/08
Free Speedy
and Metsy!0 -
I freaking love that commercial. Everytime it comes on, I stop what I'm doing to watch it. Meatloafs kid is a MEATHEAD and I love him in that spot!The best use of Life is Love.
The best expression of Love is Time.
The best time to Love is Now.
I'm never as good as when you're there.........0 -
By the way, is that a side of Beef that TIFFANY is carrying? Like......a meatloaf?.............lolThe best use of Life is Love.
The best expression of Love is Time.
The best time to Love is Now.
I'm never as good as when you're there.........0 -
Meat Loaf's rock now all in the family
The singer's classic hit bridges the generation gap in a new AT & T ad.
By Ann Powers
Times Pop Music Critic
April 22, 2008
If one adjective (besides "gigantic") adequately describes Meat Loaf, it's "game." Rock's operatic jester has tried plenty of angles in his surprisingly long-lived career: He's acted in the Broadway production of "Hair," served as John Belushi's understudy in "The National Lampoon Show," helped make history as part of "Rocky Horror," and huffed oxygen to keep going onstage back when the album "Bat Out of Hell" made him as star in the late 1970s.
So any accusations that he's sold out by participating in an AT&T ad are just silly. Mr. Loaf never had any pure ideals to protect; that's one of his best qualities.
"Paradise by the GoPhone Light" promotes AT&T's prepaid wireless service by turning one of the Loaf's most recognizable hit -- a hilarious mini-epic in which our boy attempts to seduce a date while the late, legendary commentator Phil Rizzuto calls the play-by-play -- into a father-son duet about the teen's need for a cellphone.
Former '80s sweetie Tiffany plays Mom, while the actor Adam Cagley, who looks like a mini-Loaf, steals the show as Junior (one Isaac Young ghost-sings his part). The New York and Atlanta-based advertising firm BBDO created the spot.
Kids might like this ad, but it's really meant for their folks, and the turn it takes from previous GoPhone ads (made for Cingular, before that company merged with AT&T) says something interesting about intergenerational rock. Let's face it: Mainstream rock is the new parlor music, passed down via toddler-size Ramones T-shirts, daddy-and-me dates to Lollapalooza and self-esteem lessons at Rock 'n' Roll Camp for Girls.
BBDO's previous ads for the program played on the cliche that, as Will Smith once rapped, parents just don't understand. The spots twisted the truisms of the generation gap to show that the right service plan can help families rekindle the love adolescence can destroy.
"I never hated you, and I never will!" a daughter petulantly shouts at her mother as she stomps up the stairs with her new GoPhone. "You are the most grateful little. . . .," Mom replies to the dust her girl has kicked up. (It's no accident that the spot's actors look like cleaned-up versions of Holly Hunter and Evan Rachel Wood in every mom's favorite horror flick, "Thirteen.")
The Meat Loaf ad also presents the GoPhone as the solution to discord, but it operates on the principle that harmony is the family's natural state. And that peace comes through music. When Junior asks the Loaf for a phone, the singer simmers for a moment, then agrees by breaking into song. Junior joins him, as does Mom -- they all dig rocking out to the sound of the 1970s. Classic rock bridges the gap the tech-soaked age of videogames, Facebook and hip-hop has redefined.
The clip's domestic bliss continues classic rock's drift away from rebelliousness and toward family fare, despite the best efforts of third-generation stripper lovers Buckcherry, whose hit "Crazy Bitch" nostalgically longs for the dirty days of Axl and the Crüe.
Maybe Ozzy wrecked it all on the Emmy-winning "The Osbournes" by showing that even a drug-damaged bat-decapitator can be a No. 1 hubby. Now KISS king Gene Simmons, a more cogent paterfamilias, has his own mom-and-pop reality show, and Twisted Sister drag queen Dee Snider's son Jesse has a chance of winning it all on the celeb-spawn show "Rock the Cradle." The Meat Loaf ad simply follows in this pattern of mildly spicy metal middle age.
And none of these projected dreams would resonate if they didn't seem right in the real world. The counterculture has utterly fragmented; rebellion is old hat. Rock, made for big crowds and sweeping statements, works best these days as a means of communicating the all-American values of independence, personal flash and weekend-warrior partying. Meat Loaf really is Ward Cleaver -- or at least Homer Simpson. The release his music offers is good, clean fun.
And as his TV son sings as he anticipates that cute little mobile, for that we'll love him 'till the end of time.
http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/la-et-meatloaf22apr22,0,6663217,print.story0 -
PJPixie wrote:I freaking love that commercial. Everytime it comes on, I stop what I'm doing to watch it. Meatloafs kid is a MEATHEAD and I love him in that spot!
a meathead? heheheheheheheAnd so the lion fell in love with the lamb...,"
"What a stupid lamb."
"What a sick, masochistic lion."0 -
0
-
in_hiding79 wrote:BTW...I'm quite aware that I mispelled "annoying" above!!
and you misspelled misspelled....Progress is not made by everyone joining some new fad,
and reveling in it's loyalty. It's made by forming coalitions
over specific principles, goals, and policies.
http://i36.tinypic.com/66j31x.jpg
(\__/)
( o.O)
(")_(")0 -
cutback wrote:Meat Loaf's rock now all in the family
The singer's classic hit bridges the generation gap in a new AT & T ad.
By Ann Powers
Times Pop Music Critic
April 22, 2008
If one adjective (besides "gigantic") adequately describes Meat Loaf, it's "game." Rock's operatic jester has tried plenty of angles in his surprisingly long-lived career: He's acted in the Broadway production of "Hair," served as John Belushi's understudy in "The National Lampoon Show," helped make history as part of "Rocky Horror," and huffed oxygen to keep going onstage back when the album "Bat Out of Hell" made him as star in the late 1970s.
So any accusations that he's sold out by participating in an AT&T ad are just silly. Mr. Loaf never had any pure ideals to protect; that's one of his best qualities.
"Paradise by the GoPhone Light" promotes AT&T's prepaid wireless service by turning one of the Loaf's most recognizable hit -- a hilarious mini-epic in which our boy attempts to seduce a date while the late, legendary commentator Phil Rizzuto calls the play-by-play -- into a father-son duet about the teen's need for a cellphone.
Former '80s sweetie Tiffany plays Mom, while the actor Adam Cagley, who looks like a mini-Loaf, steals the show as Junior (one Isaac Young ghost-sings his part). The New York and Atlanta-based advertising firm BBDO created the spot.
Kids might like this ad, but it's really meant for their folks, and the turn it takes from previous GoPhone ads (made for Cingular, before that company merged with AT&T) says something interesting about intergenerational rock. Let's face it: Mainstream rock is the new parlor music, passed down via toddler-size Ramones T-shirts, daddy-and-me dates to Lollapalooza and self-esteem lessons at Rock 'n' Roll Camp for Girls.
BBDO's previous ads for the program played on the cliche that, as Will Smith once rapped, parents just don't understand. The spots twisted the truisms of the generation gap to show that the right service plan can help families rekindle the love adolescence can destroy.
"I never hated you, and I never will!" a daughter petulantly shouts at her mother as she stomps up the stairs with her new GoPhone. "You are the most grateful little. . . .," Mom replies to the dust her girl has kicked up. (It's no accident that the spot's actors look like cleaned-up versions of Holly Hunter and Evan Rachel Wood in every mom's favorite horror flick, "Thirteen.")
The Meat Loaf ad also presents the GoPhone as the solution to discord, but it operates on the principle that harmony is the family's natural state. And that peace comes through music. When Junior asks the Loaf for a phone, the singer simmers for a moment, then agrees by breaking into song. Junior joins him, as does Mom -- they all dig rocking out to the sound of the 1970s. Classic rock bridges the gap the tech-soaked age of videogames, Facebook and hip-hop has redefined.
The clip's domestic bliss continues classic rock's drift away from rebelliousness and toward family fare, despite the best efforts of third-generation stripper lovers Buckcherry, whose hit "Crazy Bitch" nostalgically longs for the dirty days of Axl and the Crüe.
Maybe Ozzy wrecked it all on the Emmy-winning "The Osbournes" by showing that even a drug-damaged bat-decapitator can be a No. 1 hubby. Now KISS king Gene Simmons, a more cogent paterfamilias, has his own mom-and-pop reality show, and Twisted Sister drag queen Dee Snider's son Jesse has a chance of winning it all on the celeb-spawn show "Rock the Cradle." The Meat Loaf ad simply follows in this pattern of mildly spicy metal middle age.
And none of these projected dreams would resonate if they didn't seem right in the real world. The counterculture has utterly fragmented; rebellion is old hat. Rock, made for big crowds and sweeping statements, works best these days as a means of communicating the all-American values of independence, personal flash and weekend-warrior partying. Meat Loaf really is Ward Cleaver -- or at least Homer Simpson. The release his music offers is good, clean fun.
And as his TV son sings as he anticipates that cute little mobile, for that we'll love him 'till the end of time.
http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/la-et-meatloaf22apr22,0,6663217,print.story
So I was right....it was Tiffany!!! WOOHOO....:)And so the lion fell in love with the lamb...,"
"What a stupid lamb."
"What a sick, masochistic lion."0 -
And so the lion fell in love with the lamb...,"
"What a stupid lamb."
"What a sick, masochistic lion."0 -
cutback wrote:
That sure is Tiffany!
Oh man that's funny. "hellooo Milwaukee!""...like a word misplaced, nothing said, what a waste.."
"Sometimes life should be consumed in measured doses"
6-01-06
6/25/08
Free Speedy
and Metsy!0 -
one of the lamest commercials i've seen..I just don't trust anything that bleeds for five days and doesn't die.0
-
Slip Kid wrote:one of the lamest commercials i've seen..
Of course those freecreditreport.com commercials suck also...And so the lion fell in love with the lamb...,"
"What a stupid lamb."
"What a sick, masochistic lion."0
Categories
- All Categories
- 148.9K Pearl Jam's Music and Activism
- 110K The Porch
- 274 Vitalogy
- 35K Given To Fly (live)
- 3.5K Words and Music...Communication
- 39.2K Flea Market
- 39.2K Lost Dogs
- 58.7K Not Pearl Jam's Music
- 10.6K Musicians and Gearheads
- 29.1K Other Music
- 17.8K Poetry, Prose, Music & Art
- 1.1K The Art Wall
- 56.8K Non-Pearl Jam Discussion
- 22.2K A Moving Train
- 31.7K All Encompassing Trip
- 2.9K Technical Stuff and Help