Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
John Hoogenakker (/ ˈ h oʊ ɡ ə n æ k ər /) [1] is an American stage, screen and commercial actor. On stage, he has been in a number of plays in the Chicago and Milwaukee area. He played the Bud Light King in Bud Light's Dilly Dilly television commercials.
fictionalized version of the real town as visited by Canadian actor Elliot Page, a native Nova Scotian: Sonny the Cuckoo Bird: Cocoa Puffs cereal: 1960s–present: originally voiced by Chuck McCann: The Flintstones characters: Cocoa and Fruity Pebbles cereal: 1970–present: Columbia: Columbia Pictures: 1924–present
In South Dakota, he appeared in commercials for Lewis Drug. In Houston, he did commercials promoting Channel 2 News KPRC-TV. In 2005, five years after Varney's death, the Ernest P. Worrell character returned in new commercials as a CGI cartoon, created by an animation company called face2face and produced by Ernest originators Carden & Cherry.
While appearing in commercials may be an image-killer for A-list actors, lending their disembodied voices to huge corporations is an easy and low-stress way of keeping busy between films (not to ...
Squire Fridell (born February 9, 1943) is an American retired actor, author, and winemaker who is widely known for his prolific work in the field of commercials; in the 1980s alone, Fridell served concurrently as spokesman for Toyota cars and McDonald's, portraying Ronald McDonald.
Joe Isuzu was a fictional spokesman who starred in a series of 1980s television advertisements for Isuzu cars and trucks. Created by the ad agency Della Femina, Travisano, and Partners, and directed by Hollywood director Graham Baker, [1] the segments aired on American television in 1986–90, reaching their zenith in 1987 after the character was featured during Super Bowl XXI.
Worst Super Bowl commercial: ChatGPT. ChatGPT's ad was also a low-rated ad, according to Northwestern's ad panel. Its spot showed the evolution of human tech through black-and-white pixelated ...
The commercial spoofed George Orwell's acclaimed dystopian novel 1984, showing a runner racing down an aisle amidst a sea of seated viewers, seemingly mesmerized by a Big Brother-like figure ...