Superbowl Commercials on Twitter

January 29, 2010 · 2 Comments 

We’ve enabled auto-tweeting. All our posts should now be available on twitter as soon as they’re posted. You can find us here on Twitter.

First Super Bowl 2010 Commercial — GoDaddy.com!

January 29, 2010 · 15 Comments 

The first Super Bowl 2010 commercial is out and it’s not even February! Thank you, Lord Internets, you have served us well. Click to see it in all of its almost unrated goodness…

Pepsi Pulls Out of Super Bowl 2010

January 29, 2010 · 4 Comments 

You may have heard the stories and it’s true, it’s all true — there will be no Pepsi commercials in Superbowl 2010. Normally, this wouldn’t huge news but Pepsi has had a 23-year tradition of advertising during the event. The company was even the biggest advertiser at last year’s broadcast and has often made the Super Bowl the center of its marketing strategies.

Best Tech Superbowl Commercials

January 18, 2010 · Leave a Comment 

Technology has progressed faster than our wildest dreams — from iPhones to advanced 3D technology to razors that have like 70 blades; we’re a hop and a step away from fully functional cyborgs with 70-bladed hand-razors and the future just seems grand.

As with all things, the progress of our technology can be directly studied through the Superbowl commercials through our time. Which is why we have decided to put together a list of the Top 10 Best Technology-Related Superbowl Commercials Ever… and while the title isn’t great; the list will damn near blow your mind – which you can then replace with a smarter, stronger, faster mind made out of metal.

Best Super Bowl Commercials: 2000-2009

January 8, 2010 · 2 Comments 

You can feel Super Bowl XLIV approach — you can smell it in the air. It smells lightly of beer, chips and cholesterol. Of sweat, triumph and tears. Of angry women telling you to please just come here for a second and you’re DVRing this anyway. But most importantly, you can almost taste the money that’s being put into the latest Super Bowl commercials.

Over the years, the advertising during the Super Bowl has been as much an event as the Super Bowl itself. Companies spend outrageous money on creating and buying the ad space to get their 30 second spot in front of the bagillion (accurate number) of viewers that watch the game that fateful day. Some of the commercials are just plain awful, while others stand in our memories as works of art, as films, as the moment a company — we’re looking at you, Apple, circa 1984 — promised and eventually succeeded at changing the world.