Two tax grifting institutions working hand and hand makes sense.
It reminds me of the old Neko desktop app.
Then what do I pay you for?
Does this help?
There’s a commercial for tax preparation and a commercial featuring Wesley Snipes.
There was that one with just a chimpanzee hopping up and down and all the ad said was, “We just wasted two million dollars on this ad”.
Also, the E Trade baby. The above ad was apparently an E Trade commercial too.
I know there are aficionados out there who remember All the commercials, so here’s my question: Even though there is no official “Superbowl Ad Award,” is there an all-around Viewer-Favorite that did not feature a celebrity? Or maybe the actor in the ad was an unknown whose performance began a career? Surely it wasn’t…
I'll have to try to dislodge Johnny #5's out first.
I hate agreeing with you, but.... yeah.
If it helps any, just imagine anything he says in Gilbert Gottfried’s voice.
The uncanny valley hard at work.
I kind of hate myself right now. I try never to judge anyone on their looks, but I swear, Jared Kushner is a robot. The only thing on his face that moves is his mouth. His eyes blink, but it’s nearly perfect intervals of time, and too fast for me to keep up without getting a headache. (Yes I tried, and now that I’ve…
Look, I don’t have time to debate the appropriate word to use when an animated legume intentionally drops to his death in order to save Wesley Snipes and Veep’s Mike McLintock.
“Nah, bro. The Pringles commercial is just operating on a genius level that is above your head. You just don’t get it.” - Average Rick & Morty Fan.
We’re far past the point where characters being self aware that they’re in a commercial is funny or clever.
Not sure I’m prepared for a world in which Sam Elliot reciting Lil Nas X lyrics and celebrity spokesmen MC Hammer and Post Malone are all featured in Super Bowl ads. Not to mention Wesley Snipes in a commercial where a car crash leads to the suicide of a CGI peanut.
More proof that billionaires aren’t guaranteed to be smart about anything except the one thing they made money on: Bloomberg and Steyer could have both put their money spent so far ($300 million + by now?) into news organizations, voter registrations, and down-ballot candidates and they would have contributed to a few…
Here in New York City The Greatest City In The World™ I’m not sure I’ve actually seen a primary or presidential campaign ad on regular TV before 2020, and I’ve lived here for over 30 years. The media market is too expensive and we’re all going to vote Democratic anyway, so the presidential candidates leave us alone.…
I guess that’s an improvement (but not much) over getting a guy making $27,000 fired because he had a solitaire game open on his computer: