Wednesday, December 17, 2025

CarFax Ads: This is definitely going to be a series

 


First, I guess it's supposed to be "amusing" that the black woman is sitting on a couch in what looks like a basement apartment, in the dark, afraid to look at the price of cars because she needs to buy a car.  In other words, afraid of Adulting.  I don't get the "funny" part, though.  Yeah, new cars are expensive.  Used cars?  Also expensive.  Shielding your eyes isn't going to make the situation better.  

The average monthly payment on a new car has reached $750, with the average payoff term being 60 months.  I guess that's "scary," but only if you insist on going for a new car (which is dumb) and for some reason that can't be a real reason your only OPTION is a new car.   Like "oh no, I need to buy a 2026 Audi but I'm afraid how much it costs."  Why do you need to buy a 2026 Audi?  "Shut Up, That's Why!"

And then we get the pitch explaining why we need to use CarFax (which, yes, is a good service but not perfect- as CarFax itself will tell you, not all accidents are reported.  CarFax doesn't replace a pre-purchase inspection by a reliable, trusted mechanic.)  Hilariously, we are shown that the generic, AI-generated car being offered for sale at $21,690 has actually been patched back together after a horrific accident and is now actually worth - um, $19,250?  Seriously?  That car was totaled.  How did it only lose 11 percent of its value after that wreck?  I wouldn't pay more than $5k, and I wouldn't even pay that unless the seller confirmed that its a Honda or Toyota and the engine was undamaged by what looks to be a possibly-fatal collision.

Is this woman reassured by the commercial and ready to offer the dealer what CarFax is a "fair" price for the car- $19,250?  That IS scary.  Enjoy your basement apartment, lady.  You aren't upgrading any time soon.

Yeah....definitely a series.

Sunday, December 14, 2025

That Stupid Toyota "Holiday Job" Commercial

 


The theme throughout this entire commercial is that Christmas not only all about buying presents, but it's all about the STRESS and ANXIETY involved in hiding those presents and keeping them away from the prying eyes of children (and adults because SPEND SPEND SPEND) until December 25.  How freaking heartwarming.  

Nothing about this makes the holiday look like something to celebrate.  All I see is a lot of near-panic and Mission Impossible-level planning that must go in to keeping the evidence of over-the-top spending away from the eventual recipients of Capital One's Credit For Everyone policy. 

By the way, I've watched this commercial at least half a dozen times and I still don't understand what that little kid is saying at the end- I know it's Santa something, but I can't figure it out.  I have a guess, though:  Whatever he's saying, it translates into "Mom and Dad either bought this for me two years ago and forgot it was buried in the back of the garage, or they think I'm three and not five, because by the time it's warm enough to cruise around the neighborhood I am not going to fit into this thing."

Saturday, December 13, 2025

Three Questions for Capital One

 


1.  Is anyone over there really convinced that we want reassurance that  washed-up actress with a net worth of $80 million, her own organic vegetable business, and a promotional contract with Capital One is completely satisfied with her life?

2.  Did you really intend to make the rest of us want nothing more than to punch that perpetual smile off of this woman's stupid, self-satisfied face/

3.  Did you really think that we'd find any of this relateable?

Friday, December 12, 2025

Amazon's "Christmas Gift for Dad" Commercial is multiple levels of Bad

 


Why does the kid look like he's about to wet his pants if his girlfriend's dad doesn't like his gift?  The stakes seem really, really high here- like, the dad is either going to order the kid stoned to death, or he's going to accept the kid's bride price offer and hand over his daughter as a concubine. 

Why is the situation so tense?  It's a freaking gift exchange- stupid enough in itself, since these people are all adults- but pretty innocent when you come right down to it.  Maybe whipping out your phone at this exact moment isn't the best idea- is the kid really going to scroll for something else right there in front of the dad?  Does he think that Amazon is going to deliver whatever he orders in the next thirty seconds?  Is is REALLY a good plan to respond to a dud gift by instantly buying something else?  Is this the kind of family you want to be connected to?  The girl isn't that cute, buddy.  

Why does the father seem to hate the wrapping?  Does he really care about the wrapping?  If so, please revisit my point about maybe not being connected to this family. 

If I were the dad, the first thing I'd wonder is "why is this massager not in it's own box?"  I mean, it looks like it was just wrapped in tissue paper and stuck in a generic cardboard box.  The second thing I'd wonder is "did this originally come in a padded envelope because it's a cheap Chinese knockoff?"  And the third thing I'd wonder is "hmmm....no original box.  No directions.  Just wrapped in tissue paper.  This is something the kid stole from his own house ten minutes before heading over here.  This has Regifting written all over it."

All this being said, this is a really mean-spirited ad and it doesn't help my mood to see it being run in English and Spanish at least three times each per hour on ESPN.  Another fail, Amazon.  And go change your pants before apologizing for the stain you left on the couch, kid.

Sunday, December 7, 2025

Sell your soul now, Make this Commercial Later.

 


1.  I know it's been 24 years since a Certain Incident Involving Hijacking changed air travel security measures, but maybe we DON'T make a commercial featuring a guy leaping from his seat to grab the phone away from a stewardess making general announcements to the passengers?  Just a thought.

2.  Will Ferrell has a net worth of approximately $160 million.  He does NOT use Buy Now, Pay Later services which target not just people with low income, but who also have terrible credit ratings.  His excitement over the "convenience" of splitting purchase costs into four easy payments is exactly proportional to the amount of money he's being paid to whore Capitalism's latest Keep Them Spending, Keep them Poor probably-should-be-illegal cash cow.  It's not online gambling (at least, not technically) but it's still pretty offensive.  

Saturday, December 6, 2025

What a tangled web we Wove

 




I'm trying to grasp the mentality of being dropped into a war zone and having anywhere near your top 100 concerns getting a $10,000 engagement ring shipped to your girlfriend back in the states.  Like, how is this a priority?

It almost sounds like an SNL skit; if I found out that a fellow soldier deployed to Iraq was researching how to get a $10,000 engagement ring to his girlfriend, I wouldn't assume that he is looking to buy from some website.  I'd assume that some looting had gone on and he was trying to figure out how to get a valuable piece of contraband out of the country.

In any case, what the hell is wrong with just waiting till you get back to the States?  That ring isn't a contract, after all.  She can still dump your deployed ass while you are fighting for, um, your country.  She can turn that ring into a down payment for an Audi.  She can use it to pay for her boyfriend's bail bond.  All kinds of possibilities.

One more thing- I hear a lot of stuff about a woman's "dream ring."  If your dreams involve a piece of pretty rock that costs more than a year of my rent, well, I guess everyone has the right to dream.  But I have the right to call your dreams damn shallow.  And I will.


Friday, December 5, 2025

Lexus' gross "Through the Years" commercial*

 


I guess it's supposed to be "heartwarming" that "through the years," Lexus has never forgotten what's "important:"  Providing overpriced look-at-me mobiles for spoiled rotten rich suburbanites to make their perfect lives even more perfect at the very end of what was for many millions of people another rough year economically.

There are no recessions in December, or any other time, for customers of Christmas Lexuses (Lexi?)  There are no layoffs, no stock market crashes, no downsizing, and certainly no inflation stress.  The coming of cold weather and colored lights brings nothing less than the promise of another brand new Lexus to drive to the Million-dollar Old Family Homestead/Estate with your beautiful wife and beautiful children while dressed in your thousand-dollar winter outfits.  After parking the Lexus ostentatiously in front of the house, it's inside for an evening of congratulating each other being thankful for not being part of the 99 percent who has to worry about grubby things like keeping the lights on and if the SNAP benefits are going to be held up (again) in January.   And for being in a country with some of the lowest income tax rates in the civilized world, allowing the Very Best of Us to not only buy new cars but also stack piles of cash in hedge funds and trips to Disneyworld and brand-NEW outfits to wear to Grandpa's house because he and the siblings might recognize the cashmere coat from last year and that would be a real scandal. 

*equally gross is the comment section, which has to be bots or paid spokeswhores of Lexus.  I mean, come on.  These people can't be real.