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Every week, msnbc.com entertainment producers Gael Fashingbauer Cooper, Denise Hazlick, Paige Newman, Kurt Schlosser and Anna Chan weigh in on topics ranging from TV commercials to movie hype to the latest celebrity blunder. We're not ashamed to admit our love for bad TV or reveal what's on our iPods, and invite you to join the conversation via your comments.



TV commercials that get a bit too personal

Posted: Friday, August 17, 2007 6:00 AM by Gael Fashingbauer Cooper
Filed Under:

Our summer TV commercial contest is winding down. I'll announce the winner -- and the big loser -- on Tuesday, Aug. 28. But before we get there, let's discuss one of the hot-button topics relating to TV commercials: Ads for personal products, from hygiene items to medications to birth control and more.

There'll always be someone who accuses anyone who dislikes certain of these ads of being a big ol' prude. Come on. Oh, OK, maybe some viewers are big ol' prudes, but most of us have no problem with these products in most aspects of life. They're out there, we see them in the stores, we buy them when we need to. We're also aware that the companies that make them want to sell a lot of them, and they use advertising for the same purposes that any other company does -- to ensure that their brand name sticks in our heads longer than competitive products.

But that said, it seems to me -- maybe unfairly -- that I have a different standard for these ads than I do for commercials for other products. I'll still snark on a bad fast-food ad, or a bad car ad, but I give them a little more latitude to  try weird things. They can shoot for the funny, or the tasteless, and if they fail, it's just another unfunny, tacky ad. If a personal-product ad fails, it's not only unfunny and tacky, it's usually gross and kind of squirm-inducing.

Every year, some folks write in and claim that even bad ads are doing their job, that the mere fact that we are talking about them means the ad worked. I disagree with this premise -- not only can the product name be forgotten when an ad itself is remembered, but I do think some people vow never to buy a certain product just because of an offensive ad.

And when the product is already a sensitive one -- Viagra, or condoms, or diarrhea medication -- a questionable ad can cause quite the backlash. In 2005, a Tampax ad took our "worst commercial" honor. Readers found the ad, in which a woman uses a tampon to stop a leak in a rowboat, both bizarre and rather stupid. (She happens to have an entire box of tampons with her in a small boat?) That said, the ad's thesis may not be too far gone...great urban-legend site Snopes.com lists a story about a Marine using tampons to stop a bleeding wound. While Snopes can't verify the story, the editor admits it could be true.

This year, there are plenty of personal-product ads earning their way into our discussion -- some new, some old. Here are a few that keep coming up in your comments.

SMILING BOB
Few commercial characters come in for as much complaining from readers as Smiling Bob, who's hawking a male-specific medication. The commercials kind of feel like "Saturday Night Live" parodies to me, only they're not done as well and they don't make me laugh. And the product sounds a lot like something I see cropping up in the Spam folder in my email inbox. Just try watching this commercial and imagine explaining the product to your kids.

DIARRHEA DANCELINE
We dogged this Pepto Bismol commercial last summer, but they're still airing. Just imagine the choreographer who put this dance on his or her resume. Imagine how they came up with the hand motions: "And then when they say 'diarrhea,' I'll have them all put their hands on their rear ends! Awesome choreography, if I do say myself."

VIVA VIAGRA
Viagra ads are unpleasant on their best day, especially in a mixed-age crowd. This one comes in for most of your outrage, however. It seems that Elvis Presley's "Viva Las Vegas" song is everywhere this year. It's prominently featured in a new show premiering this fall, "Viva Laughlin," and, of course, there's this commercial. Said reader Mike in an earlier comment, "if Elvis is really dead, he's rolling in his grave." (Note: My co-worker, Allison Linn, devoted an entire post in her Ads of the Weird Weblog to this commercial.)

THE RABBIT DIED
One of the new commercials this year that's garnered plenty of negative commentary is this one, for a home pregnancy test. Some versions of the ad bragged that it was "the most sophisticated piece of technology you'll ever pee on." I've continued to see that ad air here in Seattle, but many readers have written in to say they've seen another version, that replaces the end of the tagline with "well, you know." Unsure if that's just running in some markets or in certain timeslots, or if there have been two versions from the start, but it makes me wonder if this ad is the perfect example of viewer backlash against a too-blunt ad for a personal product.

I could go on and on, but I'd rather turn the discussion back to you, the readers. Tell us about the personal-product ads you're seeing, and whether they handle a sensitive subject tactfully or just gleefully go for the gross-out.

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Comments

omg you guys are ridiculous!! it exposes your kids to sex...like they wouldnt get exposed to it in the real world. te commercials are funny and not meant to be taken seriously!! if you have such a probelm with it dont watch tv! they are just ding thier job and since it is causing a stir they are doing a good job. i find stupid commericals hilarious, i dont watch commericals for thier queality....that sounds ridiculous!!....dont take life to seriously!
I agree with just about all of the one's mentioned above, but for me, the one that stands above them all is the Valtrex ad.

"I have Herpes"  
"And, I don't"

After listening to all the disclaimers on this ad, it should be "And, I don't.... Yet."

It seems to me this is an ad that makes people think that it is possible to ensure the safety of your partner, and then, in that disclaimer, tells you that NOTHING can ensure the safety of your partner. Sorry.  I'm out.  That's a deal killer.

I'm sure that there are some people who face this problem every day, but I don't care to hear them talk about it, or advertise it on TV.  


I thought the pregnancy test commercial was very funny.  So did my husband. We're both 62 years old
with 6 grandchildren.   Come on young people, it
was funny! Smiling Bob,  nasty..
Laughing    Mansfield, GA
I thought the pregnancy test commercial was very funny.  So did my husband. We're both 62 years old
with 6 grandchildren.   Come on young people, it
was funny! Smiling Bob,  nasty..
Laughing    Mansfield, GA
Amen, Jean from Huntsville! I was a loyal Always user until that STUPID "Have a Happy Period" campaign. Again, no woman was ever consulted on that one, I assure you! I haven't purchased an Always product again and I won't until they come to their senses.
The ads for mucous are the worst.  I work with nurses and most of them think that is the most disgusting bodily fluid around.  And when the commercials come on during mealtimes it's worse.  
I'm upset about the number of personal product ads that appear on all channels when I'm watching t.v. with my sons, ages 12 and 7.  I'm no prude and enjoy a "good" joke around the water cooler, but I don't appreciate having uncomfortable topic advertising shoved down our throats when we're watching t.v. together as a family and having to explain what some of these things are far sooner than I'd hoped to!!
I agree about the ones with the suggestive music set to older couples eyeing each other and going off to get frisky. Nobody wants to see that, or especially to have to imagine them doing what comes next.  Too gross!!!
That was it!  The commerical I absolutely abhor...  "Have a Happy Period", who do they really think they are kidding?
I have to agree with the folks who actually like the HPT commercial: I've seen similar (successful) jokes in other venues (e.g., the great BBC sitcom "Coupling") about the absurdity of peeing on a stick, and I generally enjoy commercials that don't take themselves too seriously. And as far as "protecting the kids" is concerned, pee jokes are just about the mildest form of gross-out humor... and *kids* are the primary practitioners of that genre.

I also agree with Jenn about the "happy period" ad: Every time I see it, I imagine women all over the country yelling at their TV sets, "'Happy period,' my a$$!! What clueless *MAN* wrote that copy??"
The worst in the maxi pad commercial with the woman in the feminie hygene aisle. She walks up to another woman and asks if she can show her something. She then proceeds to pour blue liquid onto the pad and pat herself with it to show how fast it absorbs! Who comes up with this stuff?
I agree with all who find the Viagara, ED, Maxi Pads, Herpes and other "sex" ads appalling.  I also can not stand the Fruit of the Loom, Victoria Secrets or Hanes ads.  Who wnats to look at someone running around in their underwear.  Its uncensored pornography.  Keep it off the TV and the internet adds. PLEASE!
"The most sophisticated piece of technology you'll ever pee on." ....Are you serious? How low and disrespectful do these ads have to be. It was not only gross but trashy and unnecessary...No wonder so many people think America has no class....
I certainly agree with many of the previous posters about smilin' bob and the ED commercials.  The one that makes me say ewww the most is the dulcolax commercial that "doesn't make you go, it makes it more comfortable to go!".  Really, that just puts images in my mind that I'd rather not have be there.
I agree that many of the commercials are tacky and some are a bit icky.  But what would you have them do to advertise these personal products?  Can you really think of a tampon or viagra commercial you would enjoy?  A stab at the comedic seems to be the only way to go, so that is what the companies do.  I really don't see any other way personal product commercials could be that would make watching them more appeling.  I think they are pretty decent for the subject they are working with.
The comment to this "TV COMMERCIALS THAT GET A BIT TOO PERSONAL" article that I would like to make is this.  I get people coming into my house that I dont know, dressed in their under clothes and they can't be arrested for indecent exposure, yet, if I were to go into my front yard dressed the exact same way, someone would call the police on me or at least I would be shunned by the neighbors.  Where has the concept of decency gone?  Why can companies get away with things that we normal people can't, just because they call what they do "commercials"?
Wow, I LOVE that ad for Hanes comfort-whatever waistband underwear. The one with the women doing all those cool dance moves with exercise balls. Yeah, it's people in their underwear on tv and I suppose there some that would rather not see that, but I for one was motivated not just to buy the cute underwear but also to start working out so I could look like one of those girls!

I agree with the poster that said he thinks drug companies should not advertise. Not for prescription drugs, anyway. Advertise that stuff to DOCTORS, and let the doctors tell their patients. As for Valtrex, I'm unfortunately one of that ad's target audience and I did ask my doctor - he doesn't like the stuff and discouraged my interest in it. Regardless, I do cringe a little when that commercial comes on especially if I'm with anyone that knows of my situation. I wish they'd take it off the air and just market to physicians.
All things told, no ad will ever beat the one for Cherokee Hair Tampons.  Ahh, South Park, what would we do without you?
OK... as a 23 yr old female i understand the need to use femine products but please dont demonstrate them on tv please... i know how they work... just tell me theres a new product that will work a little better, here it is. pick it up here...
next..  ok  birth control... i dont know who wrote this comercial but my boy friend and i saw it to gether and were like ... who talks like that (in reference to the YAZ comercial)  What group of women go out for the night and have a full convo over the side effect and preventions and etc of this birth control.  and what gets me is the one girl says, wow how did u know all that.. she turns with her hair flipping on so perfect and says with ATTITUDe..  i didnt go to medical school for nothing..
My last pet peve is the one with the pig in the bar with the girl.. the song playing in the back roung "when pigs fly"... how grose.. she sees him as a pig but all he had to do was go to the bath room get a trojan and BAM... she's into him... only bc he has a trojan NOW he's worthy enough to sleep with even though he is still a pig
There are so many more but thats for others to discuss
I agree with most of the comments here; there really is no need for all that personal information in commercials, and I think things like male enhancement, herpes medication and home pregnancy tests simply do not have a place on mainstream television, despite the funny spin that may or may not be put on them...

One product I've not seen commented about her, and which has gotten to be quite graphic in content recently is toilet tissue. I'm speaking specifically about the cute cartoon bears out in the woods (yes, I see the connection) flogging how much "cleaner" their product makes the user. Cute...yes...and I think we all know what the product is supposed to do, but to compare their effectiveness with their competitors is really quite rude.

Oh, and someone ought to incarcerate the persons responsible for those Pepto ads...Not only are they insulting, but downright sophomoric.
Remember the ad for the "pre-mixed, pre-measured, disposable douche?" I was a very young man in the 1970s when that first appeared on TV. I don't recall ever seeing anything like it on TV before, and certainly nothing has been able to shock me since.
Why is it that most of the men that need "male enhancement" drugs appear to be in their forties or early fifties. If they are that young and can't get it up, then they need professional help, not Viagra.
The message that irks me the most is the one about herpes medication.  The message is actually excellent, but am I the only one who notices that all the people are very good looking, physically, and seem to be having just the best time and going on great trips etc.  It makes it look like if you get herpes...don't worry you'll meet a great looking partner and have a wonderful social life.
The ad that makes me squirm at is the Skittles commercial were the older-looking guy is sitting in the barn with the milking aparatus attached to him.  The farmer complains that the milk is sour.  Does this creep anyone else out the way it does me?    
I really dislike the YAZ commercial. Who sits around at a party and talks clinically about birth control?
I actually like the Pepto-Bismol add with the monsters doing the "nausea, heartburn, etc." dance.  It's funny to see that big Godzilla-like monster grab his stomach.

How about the ad that shows a flower whose petals are formed by incontinence pads?
My 6 year old informed me the other morning that he didn't need Cialis because he could, "get ready in 6 minutes."  Thankfully he was referring to the amount of time it takes him to get ready for school in the morning.  These commercials run beyond saturation and in inappropriate times slots.  That said we did get a giggle out of his 'interpretation' of what the intended use of Cialis was.
Valtrex is the worst.  They have these beautiful people romancing one another.  Yet, we know that one or both of them is supposed to have herpes.  I don't like to see this because it just makes me physically ill.
The Viagra ads, and those similar to them, are so completely disrespectful to the male and female audience. I turn away from the stations that show them.
I suspect that a lot of people do the same--that a LOT of people turn away, if only for a few minutes. If you have a spot that is just after a Viagra ad, you should get a 50% rate reduction.

I think that such ads are a contributing to the long term decline in viewership in major TV stations.

As they proliferate, I find fewer TV and radio alternatives that are acceptable. If a few major stations would announce that they would NEVER show these ads anymore, I would restrict my viewing/listening to those stations.

I love the Smiling Bob ads. I love the retro look and the clever ways they find to suggest everything but say nothing. I think the 'diarrhea dance' is kind of cute, too. The ads for ED are getting more tolerable, but when they get to the part where they run through the side effects and have to discuss the '4 hour erection' I still squirm. Do men feel the same way when ads for tampons and pads come on?
My favorite personal ad ever: many years, when Always introduced their "wings", they had a commercial in which the pad flapped its wings and flew away.  I found it hilarious! Anyone else remember that one?
Saw the Viva Viagara ad for the first time last evening. Just when I thought I couldn't become more jaded.
The commercial about the maxi pad on the roller coaster is BIZARRE!
My issue with the much maligned Valtrex commercial is the statement at the end that says the vast majority of people who have genital herpes got it from partners who weren't showing symptoms.  Well, duh!  The happy period commercial bothers me too.  The only happy period you ever have is the one that tells you that you don't need "the most advanced technology you will ever pee on".
Things I won't ever buy because of their commercials: Geico Insurance, anything advertised by Ron Popel, Carvel Ice Cream, anything endorsed by Bob Villa or the short black bearded guy who says, "Billy May, here..."
I totally agree with Carol's comment about the All Bran commercial with the construction worker and the "symbolic poop" that keeps happening behind him!  I pointed it out to my wife and told her that I couldn't believe that they were showing that on regular TV!  It's disgusting!  Next they will have people passing gas on commercials.  Oh, and that brings up the one with the man in the meeting and the lady keeps making references to flatulence!  YUCK!!!  Bodily functions should not be discussed on regular TV!  Save it for cable!
Viva TiVo!!!
I think the pregnancy test commercial is hilarious! I also don't mind the Pepto-Bismol one.  It's cute and makes you remember the product.  

I don't care for the male enhancement ads which repeat "a certain part of the male anatomy" or whatever.  Smiling Bob is pretty funny but I don't have a clue what product he's advertising.
How about a corner of a website where people could vote for the most detested ads?   Geico Gecko, Aflac duck, etc
The funniest commercial is for the My Circle cell phone plan.  The one were two guys are out to eat and one turns around and you see a lower back tattoo that says "Playa".  The other guy takes him out of his circle, and possibly out of his life.  It is so funny.
Yeah, I'll have a "Happy Period" after I slug the perpetrators of those commercials with a sledge hammer.  Catch a woman on the wrong day, and that's possible.

I don't want to know that you have "feminine itch with odor."  Gross.  Really.  As long as I can't smell you, keep your problem to yourself.

And the Viagra (I think) where the man is washing his car and woman gets all hot and bothered watching.  What the...?!?  I'm glad to know that older people have sex, but do I have to KNOW that older people have sex...in the middle of the day?  Please!!!!!
This one might be a Canadian one, but Whiskas cat food has a line of commercials, where a man plays the part of the cat.  The WORST one of the lot has the lady of the house looking at a broken fan, and the "CAT" (man) is busy in the litterbox, scratching away as he finishes.  This one totally grosses me out every time.  There are 4 or 5 others, but this one is a bit TOO much.  
whenever i see that couple in separate bathtubs outside i hope that they are in a VERY private place and wonder - is there any water in those tubs and, if so, did they have to lug it to the tubs and if they lugged the water themselves, did that put them out of the mood?
KIM-TEXAS....I remember the wings flying away, it actually stuck in my head and made me try the..lol

I also find the "most sophisticated piece of equipmetn you will ever pee on"...absolutely hysterical...

Check out this ad running for Stanley Steemer.  Unbelievable!  http://www.advertisementave.com/tv/ad.asp?adid=765
"I actually like the Pepto-Bismol add with the monsters doing the 'nausea, heartburn, etc.' dance.  It's funny to see that big Godzilla-like monster grab his stomach."

I like that commercial, too, primarily because I see it as ridiculing the original "dance line" ad, which I found completely odious. Just as comedians are often at their funniest when they're responding to a joke that bombed, advertisers are often at their best when recovering from an awful ad.

BTW, the original didn't offend me because it referred to diarrhea -- diarrhea happens -- but because it was so obnoxiously cutesy. More generally, after reading all these comments, I've come to the conclusion that we as a culture are just waaaay too hung up about bodily stuff. People have sex (or fail to have sex, as the case may be), and they eliminate and menstruate and take care of their hygiene... and perhaps if we attached less mystery, shame, and guilt to those prefectly natural things, we'd be a little less freaked out by these ads.

I've never lived in Europe, but I gather they have a much more open attitude about bodily functions and even nudity in advertising. I'm not so sure they're wrong. Lots of the ads mentioned in this thread bother me, too, but generally they bother me because they're *bad ads*, and not merely because they're "too personal."

YMMV, of course.
The commercials that bother me the most are the ones for birth control that show a woman discussing the benefits of her newly prescribed pill while she sits in a VIP lounge at a club with her friends. I don't think there's ever been an instance where I've been inspired to brag about Ortho-Tricycline during girls' night out.
I really like the ad where rabbits have all their "lucky rabbits foot"  reconnected, in multi colors, with the chains still attached.  The scene where the rabbit is going through water therapy by swimming in a pool really cracks me up.  The only problem with this ad is that I can't remember what the product is!  Great visual and concept, but I guess it would fail for poor product recognition.  
Bill dauphin...totally agree with you...I am not ashamed of the ads, anyone whose taken 6th grade health class shouldnt be, What annoys me is the insult to our intelligence and the pure stupidity of the ads
i am really sick of all these commericals as well. They are constantly coming on.
& every time the cialis commerical comes on i change the channel
bc ive basically memorized it since it comes on too much..
not a pleasant thing to have in your memory.


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