Canadian Commercials vs American Commercials

Mowich

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Want to know one quick way to tell how different Canada is from the U.S.?

It won't take long. Just watch a few TV commercials. They speak volumes.

These days, it seems impossible to sell anything on U.S. TV networks without the use of explosions, interpersonal violence, gratuitous sex, car wrecks, or gunplay. It's almost a flip image of Canadian TV.

This is an area I know well, having worked for over 20 years as the TV critic at three major U.S. newspapers before becoming the Canada columnist for Dow Jones' MarketWatch.com website.

So, let me ask you: Why would a guy being karate-kicked into a dryer in a laundromat have anything to do with selling candy bars? You might want to direct that question to the ad geniuses at the U.S. agency who came up with the idea.

Or, do you really need two bratty kids gratuitously smashing furniture while a runaway car takes out their front fence to sell insurance?

Or, why does a current commercial for Hot Pockets look more like a porn movie, with an attractive, overly cosmeticized model making highly suggestive tongue gestures while casting a come-hither look at the camera?

Do you really need a threatening phrase like, "I'm gonna hunt you down!" to sell a mobile phone?

If the U.S. is a consumer-driven culture -- and it assuredly is -- it's made up of consumers who appear to make key buying decisions on the basis of physical attributes and mayhem.

And we haven't even mentioned the carnage routinely seen on U.S. TV in movie ads, which inevitably involve major gunplay, bloodletting and massive property destruction.

Watching Canadian TV commercials provides blessed relief to this American who lives near the Canadian border. I watch Canadian TV daily.

On much of Canadian TV, you see elements sadly lacking on American spots: humour, whimsy, subtlety, cleverness, intelligence.

Since most Canadians get U.S. channels through their cable or satellite provides, they probably already know the stark difference in the way the two countries advertise products.

Here in the U.S., a much more competitive, dog-eat-dog society, one uses the hard sell to reach an audience of hard people.

When I point out the difference to friends here in the Seattle area, they're usually surprised -- and often pleased -- with the relative difference in the two countries' TV commercials.

I've been doing a bit of amateur comparative sociology about this subject the past couple of years.

Having lived in Canada, I got hooked years ago on Hockey Night in Canada when I was a sportswriter for a Montreal daily. To me, it's the best place to watch Canada's national game. I often watch in French. (Go Habs!)

Yes, even with Don Cherry. ESPECIALLY because of uber-bloviator Don Cherry, who dresses like a bouncer in Vegas. (I tune in every week partly to see whose couch or drapes, or foreign flags have died to make his latest wardrobe.)

On ESPN and other American sports networks, if you're going to see violent and crude commercials, this is the place.

But the CBC's sportscast ads are remarkably restrained compared to those on U.S. sports networks.

I've been watching the NHL on CBC for the past two years with an American friend, a die-hard NHL fan. I once asked him, "Notice the difference between this and U.S. TV? Especially the commercials?"

He not only noticed it, he appreciates it.

So, I've made a Canada convert: Largely because the more pleasant ads, he now wants to watch the NHL on CBC instead.

If you want a microcosm of what's wrong with the U.S. -- and what's right with Canada -- you couldn't find a better place to look than by watching their TV commercials.

Seeing them, it's painfully obvious the U.S. is a more violent society.


The Difference Between American and Canadian TV Commercials | Bill Mann
 

Tecumsehsbones

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Mar 18, 2013
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Want to know one quick way to tell how different Canada is from the U.S.?

It won't take long. Just watch a few TV commercials. They speak volumes.

These days, it seems impossible to sell anything on U.S. TV networks without the use of explosions, interpersonal violence, gratuitous sex, car wrecks, or gunplay. It's almost a flip image of Canadian TV.

This is an area I know well, having worked for over 20 years as the TV critic at three major U.S. newspapers before becoming the Canada columnist for Dow Jones' MarketWatch.com website.


Ah. I was wondering what would cause a presumably sane adult to give a rat's a ss about the moral tone of TV ads.
 

karrie

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Jan 6, 2007
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So, let me ask you: Why would a guy being karate-kicked into a dryer in a laundromat have anything to do with selling candy bars? You might want to direct that question to the ad geniuses at the U.S. agency who came up with the idea.

Or, do you really need two bratty kids gratuitously smashing furniture while a runaway car takes out their front fence to sell insurance?

Or, why does a current commercial for Hot Pockets look more like a porn movie, with an attractive, overly cosmeticized model making highly suggestive tongue gestures while casting a come-hither look at the camera?

On much of Canadian TV, you see elements sadly lacking on American spots: humour, whimsy, subtlety, cleverness, intelligence.

What I find most amusing about this article, is that in his choice for commercials, he seems to have missed the 'humour and subtlety'.

'Hot makes everything better'.... the come hither stare, and the hot chick, is a joke within the commercial. 'Hot makes everything better.' They couldn't have spelled it out more clearly.

'Nobody better lay a finger on my butterfinger' has been a long standing ad campaign for that particular candy bar, and they are simply carrying it on with an ad poking fun at 'men's' obsession with martial arts, as evidenced by the eye rolling wife at the end.

And the insurance ad is a humorous portrayal of why you need insurance. Kids smash stuff, have accidents, floods happen.

It seems to me someone picked a really tame array of commercials to get worked up over, and made himself seem smug and humourless in the process.
 

L Gilbert

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Ah. I was wondering what would cause a presumably sane adult to give a rat's a ss about the moral tone of TV ads.
Well, this sane adult couldn't really give a rat's azz about ads period.

What I find most amusing about this article, is that in his choice for commercials, he seems to have missed the 'humour and subtlety'.

'Hot makes everything better'.... the come hither stare, and the hot chick, is a joke within the commercial. 'Hot makes everything better.' They couldn't have spelled it out more clearly.

'Nobody better lay a finger on my butterfinger' has been a long standing ad campaign for that particular candy bar, and they are simply carrying it on with an ad poking fun at 'men's' obsession with martial arts, as evidenced by the eye rolling wife at the end.

And the insurance ad is a humorous portrayal of why you need insurance. Kids smash stuff, have accidents, floods happen.

It seems to me someone picked a really tame array of commercials to get worked up over, and made himself seem smug and humourless in the process.
I got it. None were funny except the ins. ad, and all were aimed at people within the bottom average of IQs.
 

karrie

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Well, this sane adult couldn't really give a rat's azz about ads period.

I got it. None were funny except the ins. ad, and all were aimed at people within the bottom average of IQs.


What are they supposed to do? Aim for the top? That doesn't work on typical prime time tv. See, if you make a dumb joke, the less intelligent laugh, and the smarter people feel smug for being 'above' the joke, and nobody walks away frustrated or feeling like they are unwelcome customers for a product. But, aim at the intellectual, and it goes over the head of half the population, and the smug person still might not be swayed by your ad, and you've made the lower half feel like you're having a laugh over their heads.
 

eh1eh

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What are they supposed to do? Aim for the top? That doesn't work on typical prime time tv. See, if you make a dumb joke, the less intelligent laugh, and the smarter people feel smug for being 'above' the joke, and nobody walks away frustrated or feeling like they are unwelcome customers for a product. But, aim at the intellectual, and it goes over the head of half the population, and the smug person still might not be swayed by your ad, and you've made the lower half feel like you're having a laugh over their heads.

I didn't know I was so intelligent. I tend to feel most ads are insulting my intelligence, such as it is, and I can't believe people think otherwise. Well I guess I just learned something.


who knew she was so acrobatic? ;)

Sean Hayes & tremendously hot girl in laundromat - YouTube

something that I had mentioned in another thread. there was a Nissan commercial involving a Ouija board. I saw an autocomplete result in youtube, but no video. I wonder if it was removed because the commercial involved an occult device?

Oh ya. Coming soon!

Ok, that didn't sound too intelligent but hey, double entendre joke. Funny right?
 

karrie

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I didn't know I was so intelligent. I tend to feel most ads are insulting my intelligence, such as it is, and I can't believe people think otherwise. Well I guess I just learned something.

You come hang out on a predominantly political discussion forum as a hobby. Did you think you have a below average intellect?
 

Sal

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What are they supposed to do? Aim for the top? That doesn't work on typical prime time tv. See, if you make a dumb joke, the less intelligent laugh, and the smarter people feel smug for being 'above' the joke, and nobody walks away frustrated or feeling like they are unwelcome customers for a product. But, aim at the intellectual, and it goes over the head of half the population, and the smug person still might not be swayed by your ad, and you've made the lower half feel like you're having a laugh over their heads.
interesting you should say that....the OP that Loc posted yesterday on things that are different if you are rich stated: the ad companies harvest data from FB and other places and the pop ads on their computers and the scroll ads on FB are different than your average persons...they are considered to be a different target market
 

karrie

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interesting you should say that....the OP that Loc posted yesterday on things that are different if you are rich stated: the ad companies harvest data from FB and other places and the pop ads on their computers and the scroll ads on FB are different than your average persons...they are considered to be a different target market

Advertising also tailors itself for the location, and the presumed intellect of the people at said location. National Geographic channel, for example, runs a different calibre of advertising than prime time Fox tv. It's all about getting to your target, without burning bridges.
 

L Gilbert

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What are they supposed to do? Aim for the top? That doesn't work on typical prime time tv. See, if you make a dumb joke, the less intelligent laugh, and the smarter people feel smug for being 'above' the joke, and nobody walks away frustrated or feeling like they are unwelcome customers for a product. But, aim at the intellectual, and it goes over the head of half the population, and the smug person still might not be swayed by your ad, and you've made the lower half feel like you're having a laugh over their heads.
I walk away totally disgusted. They sure as hell don't seem to want my business. Mind you, that's fine with me. :)
 

karrie

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I just skip commercials altogether now. I PVR pretty much my whole lineup of shows. I never watch real time anymore. The only time I have to deal with commercials is if I'm watching something 'on demand', where they disable to skip feature to 'pay' for the convenience.
 

Sal

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I just skip commercials altogether now. I PVR pretty much my whole lineup of shows. I never watch real time anymore. The only time I have to deal with commercials is if I'm watching something 'on demand', where they disable to skip feature to 'pay' for the convenience.
notice how they only contain a few commercials, I"m thinking those advertisers must pay huge premiums for those spots. They are solid gold because the time frame is too short to allow one to get up and go do a few chores as one would during regular tv commercial spots.
 
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SLM

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I just skip commercials altogether now. I PVR pretty much my whole lineup of shows. I never watch real time anymore. The only time I have to deal with commercials is if I'm watching something 'on demand', where they disable to skip feature to 'pay' for the convenience.
I don't watch the on demand television programs too often, but most of the advertising I have seen when I do watch it always seems to be about the network advertising other programming. Very very few 'regular' commericals, at least from the best of my recollection anyway, like I said I don't watch on demand television all that often.
 

karrie

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My biggest complaint with on demand advertising, is that on TELUS, kid you not, 90% of the time, they are forcing you to watch an advertisement for the show you're already watching. It would be a highly lucrative advertising slot, and they're f-ing it up.
 

SLM

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Mar 5, 2011
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My biggest complaint with on demand advertising, is that on TELUS, kid you not, 90% of the time, they are forcing you to watch an advertisement for the show you're already watching. It would be a highly lucrative advertising slot, and they're f-ing it up.

Ha! Brilliant marketing strategy! Oh, TELUS is going places.

Lol.
 

Blackleaf

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There are too many commercials on US TV. Every few minutes. In Britain they come on only every fifteen or twenty minutes. And on BBC channels there are no commercials at all. Just continuous uninterrupted programs.