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Clydesdales and puppy!
What a boring game. |
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Loved the Clydesdales ad with the puppy.
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Toyota using Terry Crews + The Muppets: how can you not love that?
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Re: Coke. I loved the football one, not the diversity one with the bad translations.
"Above the fruited plain", translated as "on top of the fruits." |
^^^ I liked both of those, too! Muppets and cute kids are always winners. The Doritos time machine ad was cute, too.
Regarding GoldieBlox...this is a great idea. I saw the founder being interviewed and this idea is a real winner. In my opinion, Lego has really missed the boat by targeting their products to boys. My daughter loved Legos and subscribed to the magazine. You could send in your creation pictures; the boy to girl submissions ratio was always about 20:1. The crazy thing is that Lego has produced the Belville series for girls, but has never made them widely available. We came across them at the DisneyWorld Lego store when our daughter was about 4, and loaded up on all the sets over the years. We had to either buy them there or on-line at the Lego store, and they often sold out quickly. She called them "Princess Legos" and spent untold hours playing with them. They were her #1 toy. They were all based on classic tales. http://cdn.thebrickblogger.com/wp-co...ted-Palace.jpg When I saw the GoldieBlox interview, my husband and I talked about it once again, and agreed that Lego had missed a golden opportunity with their limited marketing to boys. Good for GoldieBlox. |
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I guess I never really thought of it before, but you're right; Legos has never really made an effort to appeal to girls. It really is unfortunate. |
I have a 7 year old son and a 5 year old daughter. In the past 2 years I have seen a significant increase in the legos for little girls, but the variety and choices still pales in comparison to that of the boys. Even the 5 year old notices: "where are the rest of the GIRLS legos??? There's SO MANY legos for boys..." However, we have quite a few age appropriate sets for her, and she loves them.
It seems the "girl versions" hit the aisles in the past 2-3 years, and then the legos are growing up with the girls. In other words, as she has aged, the newest releases seem age appropriate for her. However, there are not yet the huge, complex sets (aged 8-12) for her that would be an equal comparison to what we are buying for our son. My hope is that the new releases each year will continue to target these girls as they grow up. We are lucky that she seems to be in the right age range.. if she were a few years older there would be many fewer choices. She is currently doing the "5-12" sets, but really, in complexity, those are more 5-8. Older girls would be bored. She also has 2 GoldieBlox sets and has to fight off big brother from playing with them. I love the idea behind GoldieBlox and was thrilled that they were selected from over 15,000 submission to get the SuperBowl commercial by intuit. YouTube full length SuperBowl commercial. |
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Love that letter, Kevin! :) |
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Enough of my friends agree with my philosophy that, when a commercial came on with dubious parentage yesterday, they started to make buzzer noises, saying, "Bad commercial! Next!" With that said, can you imagine the pressure of working for the ad campaign for Budweiser? |
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Commercials that made me LOL (seen only on youtube, did not watch Super Bowl): Volkwagon Wings---Doritos Time Machine--Cheerios--Sarah McLachlan's cameo for Audi. Commercials that made me cry: Microsoft Empowering. Did contestants on a yet-to-be-aired episode of The Apprentice script/direct this one: RadioShack 80's |
The Dannon Oikos commericial with John Stamos was hilarious!
And is it me, or does John Stamos just get better with age? http://www.breathecast.com/data/imag...hoto.png?w=600 |
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