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Chandler Day's younger brother Canon, stepped up after his older brother was injured to help Houston beat Collierville. How Canon Day thrust into spotlight helped seal Houston football's region ...
Terry Tate: Office Linebacker was a series of short comedy television commercials created by Peter Arnell and the Arnell Group, for Reebok, based on a short film pilot created in 2000 by Rawson Marshall Thurber. [1] [2] Tate was first shown at Super Bowl XXXVII in 2003.
"Hey Kid, Catch!" is a television commercial for Coca-Cola starring Pittsburgh Steelers defensive tackle "Mean" Joe Greene. The commercial debuted on October 1, 1979, and was re-aired multiple times, most notably during Super Bowl XIV in 1980. The 60-second commercial won a Clio Award for being one of the best television commercials of 1979. [1]
The ad starts with a professional photographer taking photos of Joe Theismann during a football game with a Canon AE-1 camera. The ad ends with Theismann using the same camera to take photos of his family throwing around a football at their house. [31] Insurance Sentry Insurance "Ernie"
Then in January, the Chiefs released a postseason commercial titled “Falling for Football,” which is framed as a spoof trailer for a Hallmark-esque film about a diehard NFL fan who works at a ...
A pop culture phenomenon gets a sequel, two decades later. On Sept. 5, Pepsi welcomed football season by releasing a star-studded commercial in the theme of upcoming blockbuster “Gladiator II ...
Viewers who clicked through were 124% more likely to know that Carlsberg were an official sponsor of the England Football team. The website link shown at the end of the commercial, oldlions.com, received 390,000 hits during the World Cup, and Old Lions spent two weeks at the number 1 position on the Google Video download chart. It was estimated ...
"Secret Tournament" (also known as "Scorpion KO" or "The Cage") was a Nike global advertising campaign coinciding with the 2002 FIFA World Cup. [1] With a marketing budget estimated at US$100 million, [2] the advert featured 24 top contemporary football players and former player Eric Cantona as the tournament "referee".