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Venida Evans began appearing in a series of IKEA advertisements beginning in 2008 as an invisible, older woman known simply as "The Muse." [ 2 ] The commercials were created by Deutsch New York, the ad agency which is responsible for IKEA's advertisements in the United States. [ 2 ]
Carly Marie Foulkes is a Canadian model and actress who became known for appearing in a series of T-Mobile myTouch 4G television commercials, in which she often wore pink/magenta-and-white summer dresses. She continued as spokesperson in other T-Mobile ads in which she was depicted as a pink-and-black leather-clad biker girl. She served as the ...
Kelly Jean Harmon Miller (née Harmon; born November 9, 1948) is an American actress and model, best known for appearing in a series of television commercials for Tic Tac mints. She was a regular on the 1983 NBC series Bay City Blues , playing the role of Sunny Hayward.
One of the Looney Tunes in form of the commercials along with Henery Hawk, Egghead Jr., and Miss Prissy. Jason Alexander: 2001–2003 Hip-Hop Hamsters: Kia Soul: 2010–present: lip-synchs to Black Sheep's 1992 single "The Choice Is Yours". The Hamsters later updated their style to coincide with the Soul's added features. The HotBot: Kia Forte ...
Coppock was raised in Weston, Massachusetts, the daughter of teacher and writer Susan Coppock. [1] Her father is a retired lawyer. She graduated from Weston High School, [1] and attended Colby College in Maine, [2] where she was a member of the Colbyettes, an a cappella singing group, [3] and the Circle in the Square Theatre School in New York City.
Milana Vayntrub was born on March 8, 1987, to a secular Ashkenazi Jewish family in Tashkent, Uzbekistan, then a Soviet republic. [5] [6] When she was two years old, she and her parents immigrated to the United States as refugees from antisemitism, [7] settling in West Hollywood, California.
This is SportsCenter was a series of comical television commercials that debuted in 1995 and was run by ESPN to promote their SportsCenter sports news show, based on the show's opening tagline. [1] The ads were presented in a deadpan , mockumentary style, lampooning various aspects of sports, and sports broadcasting.
Broadview Security – a parody of the actual Broadview Security commercials that infer that women living alone in large houses are the most likely to be victimized by any man she meets (including male family members, androgynous singer k.d. lang, and two kids using a trenchcoat posing as an adult). [98]