Super Bowl 2024 Commercials (Picture Credit: IMDb & Youtube)
On Sunday, February 11, the most awaited Super Bowl match occurred, where the Kansas City Chiefs played against the San Francisco 49ers. The Chiefs also won it this year, and it is their second consecutive win. The game was interesting indeed, but the entertaining star-studded advertisements made it fun. From Ben Affleck, Matt Damon, and Jennifer Aniston to Jenna Ortega, Lionel Messi, and more, here are some of the Super Bowl Commercials of 2024.
The Super Bowl is a significant event in the United States, and people utilize this event by launching new movie trailers and entertaining commercials. Scroll below for more.
The Super Bowl has seen some fantastic commercials. For example, the Budweiser Frogs ad, Nike’s Hare Jordan ft Bugs Bunny, the Star Wars included Volkswagen commercial, and others. The 1980s Coca-Cola ad featuring ‘Mean’ Joe Greene, FedEx’s Cast Away ad, and...
On Sunday, February 11, the most awaited Super Bowl match occurred, where the Kansas City Chiefs played against the San Francisco 49ers. The Chiefs also won it this year, and it is their second consecutive win. The game was interesting indeed, but the entertaining star-studded advertisements made it fun. From Ben Affleck, Matt Damon, and Jennifer Aniston to Jenna Ortega, Lionel Messi, and more, here are some of the Super Bowl Commercials of 2024.
The Super Bowl is a significant event in the United States, and people utilize this event by launching new movie trailers and entertaining commercials. Scroll below for more.
The Super Bowl has seen some fantastic commercials. For example, the Budweiser Frogs ad, Nike’s Hare Jordan ft Bugs Bunny, the Star Wars included Volkswagen commercial, and others. The 1980s Coca-Cola ad featuring ‘Mean’ Joe Greene, FedEx’s Cast Away ad, and...
- 2/12/2024
- by Esita Mallik
- KoiMoi
Exclusive: Winter State Entertainment on Tuesday announced two feature docs on NFL Hall of Famer Mel Blount and MLB icon Tommy John that will lead its forthcoming slate, having wrapped principal photography on each right before the launch of the WGA strike.
The first film, Mel Blount: Whatever It Takes, on longtime Pittsburgh Steeler Blount, will offer a deep dive into his life journey, from his arduous beginning in a segregated Vidalia, Georgia to getting drafted in the 3rd round by the struggling Steelers, to the next 14 years, where he won four championships and cemented himself as the best at his position as cornerback. Upon retirement, Blount shifted his focus towards kids who were stuck in the system, opening two youth homes to give them a chance to turn their lives around, even when the community and KKK pushed back against him. Now, 40 years later, Blount has afforded this opportunity to hundreds.
The first film, Mel Blount: Whatever It Takes, on longtime Pittsburgh Steeler Blount, will offer a deep dive into his life journey, from his arduous beginning in a segregated Vidalia, Georgia to getting drafted in the 3rd round by the struggling Steelers, to the next 14 years, where he won four championships and cemented himself as the best at his position as cornerback. Upon retirement, Blount shifted his focus towards kids who were stuck in the system, opening two youth homes to give them a chance to turn their lives around, even when the community and KKK pushed back against him. Now, 40 years later, Blount has afforded this opportunity to hundreds.
- 8/1/2023
- by Matt Grobar
- Deadline Film + TV
Coca-Cola, Imagine Entertainment and Amazon have partnered in Christmas Always Finds Its Way, a trilogy of short films that will launch today on Amazon Prime and promoted heavily through the holiday season.
The anthology was created in partnership with the production company Prettybird, which tasked its stable of directors to shoot films in their home countries, about the common theme of real and magical connection in the holiday season. Brazilian helmer Vellas shot Alma, a fable about a town set in Mexico that is famous for its year-round production of Christmas decorations, but whose workers lose the Xmas spirit until it is reignited by an unlikely source; French helmer Jb Braud’s Les Petits Mondes De Noel, is about an estranged couple in Paris that reconnects as they create decorative holiday window displays; and U.S. helmer Alex Buono has gone for the comedy jugular with Christmas Bites, about a...
The anthology was created in partnership with the production company Prettybird, which tasked its stable of directors to shoot films in their home countries, about the common theme of real and magical connection in the holiday season. Brazilian helmer Vellas shot Alma, a fable about a town set in Mexico that is famous for its year-round production of Christmas decorations, but whose workers lose the Xmas spirit until it is reignited by an unlikely source; French helmer Jb Braud’s Les Petits Mondes De Noel, is about an estranged couple in Paris that reconnects as they create decorative holiday window displays; and U.S. helmer Alex Buono has gone for the comedy jugular with Christmas Bites, about a...
- 12/7/2022
- by Mike Fleming Jr
- Deadline Film + TV
The Coca-Cola Company has spent decades making soda, iced tea, fruit juice, water and something that may not be as easy to get in front of consumers in days to come: commercials.
Coca-Cola struck a chord in pop culture dozens of times over the years with clever TV ads featuring singers on a hilltop or a sympathetic “Mean” Joe Greene, but these days, many of the streaming-video services that are growing in popularity among consumers want no part of such stuff. Even those on-demand video hubs that do air commercials tend to run just a fraction of the spots seen during a night of regular primetime TV.
As a result, Coca-Cola is placing more emphasis – and dollars once earmarked for traditional advertising – on alliances with Netflix, Disney Plus and others that have little to do with the jingles and call-outs to summer cookouts and movie-going that have been hallmarks of its commercials for generations.
Coca-Cola struck a chord in pop culture dozens of times over the years with clever TV ads featuring singers on a hilltop or a sympathetic “Mean” Joe Greene, but these days, many of the streaming-video services that are growing in popularity among consumers want no part of such stuff. Even those on-demand video hubs that do air commercials tend to run just a fraction of the spots seen during a night of regular primetime TV.
As a result, Coca-Cola is placing more emphasis – and dollars once earmarked for traditional advertising – on alliances with Netflix, Disney Plus and others that have little to do with the jingles and call-outs to summer cookouts and movie-going that have been hallmarks of its commercials for generations.
- 9/8/2020
- by Brian Steinberg
- Variety Film + TV
After sitting on the sidelines for a year, Coca-Cola is getting back into the Super Bowl ad game.
The beverage giant has purchased a 60-second commercial slated to run in Fox’s broadcast of Super Bowl Liv on February 2 in 2020, a spokeswoman for the Atlanta company said Tuesday. The creative execution and concept for the ad, she said, have yet to be determined.
Coca-Cola retreated from the field of play in 2019. opting to run a single, animated commercial just before kickoff CBS’ broadcast of the event, putting an end to 11 consecutive years of Super Bowl appearances. The company’s return to the main show provides further evidence of the newfound attraction Madison Avenue has to the glitzy gridiron classic, which in recent years has been less of a must-buy. Fox has been seeking anywhere from “north of $5 million” to $5.6 million for a 30-second ad berth, Seth Winter, Fox’s executive vice president of sports sales,...
The beverage giant has purchased a 60-second commercial slated to run in Fox’s broadcast of Super Bowl Liv on February 2 in 2020, a spokeswoman for the Atlanta company said Tuesday. The creative execution and concept for the ad, she said, have yet to be determined.
Coca-Cola retreated from the field of play in 2019. opting to run a single, animated commercial just before kickoff CBS’ broadcast of the event, putting an end to 11 consecutive years of Super Bowl appearances. The company’s return to the main show provides further evidence of the newfound attraction Madison Avenue has to the glitzy gridiron classic, which in recent years has been less of a must-buy. Fox has been seeking anywhere from “north of $5 million” to $5.6 million for a 30-second ad berth, Seth Winter, Fox’s executive vice president of sports sales,...
- 12/3/2019
- by Brian Steinberg
- Variety Film + TV
Kristin Chenoweth, Sarah Michelle Gellar and Charlie Sheen are all vying for the same job on Super Bowl Sunday.
Each will try to get it done in a different way. Gellar will display amazing range, going from frightened out of her wits to calm and confident – all in the space of 30 seconds. Chenoweth will use quirky humor to get people laughing quickly, working with a range of talented dogs to assist her with the task. And Sheen will utter a single line that he hopes will keep people riveted to their screens.
The three actors play big roles in three different Super Bowl commercials. Gellar will hold forth for Procter & Gamble’s Olay. Chenoweth takes to the ad field for Avocados of Mexico. And Sheen makes a pivotal cameo for Kraft Heinz’ Planters. While the use of celebrities in these big annual Madison Avenue pitches is as familiar as the football they support,...
Each will try to get it done in a different way. Gellar will display amazing range, going from frightened out of her wits to calm and confident – all in the space of 30 seconds. Chenoweth will use quirky humor to get people laughing quickly, working with a range of talented dogs to assist her with the task. And Sheen will utter a single line that he hopes will keep people riveted to their screens.
The three actors play big roles in three different Super Bowl commercials. Gellar will hold forth for Procter & Gamble’s Olay. Chenoweth takes to the ad field for Avocados of Mexico. And Sheen makes a pivotal cameo for Kraft Heinz’ Planters. While the use of celebrities in these big annual Madison Avenue pitches is as familiar as the football they support,...
- 2/2/2019
- by Brian Steinberg
- Variety Film + TV
Coca-Cola is pulling back from the Super Bowl after an 11-year run, opting to run a commercial just before kickoff of the CBS broadcast of the game on February 3, but not in the event itself.
CBS is seeking between $5.1 million and $5.3 million for commercial packages that air in the game itself. Ads that run pre-game can cost anywhere from hundreds of thousands of dollars to a few million, depending on their proximity to the start of the annual pigskin contest.
Coca-Cola intends to run a 60-second commercial just before kickoff that burnishes themes of diversity and inclusion, says Stuart Kronauge, senior vice president of marketing for Coca-Cola North America and president of its sparking beverages business unit. “We have a long history of using the country’s biggest advertising stage to share a message of unity and positivity, especially at times when our nation feels divided,” he said in a statement.
CBS is seeking between $5.1 million and $5.3 million for commercial packages that air in the game itself. Ads that run pre-game can cost anywhere from hundreds of thousands of dollars to a few million, depending on their proximity to the start of the annual pigskin contest.
Coca-Cola intends to run a 60-second commercial just before kickoff that burnishes themes of diversity and inclusion, says Stuart Kronauge, senior vice president of marketing for Coca-Cola North America and president of its sparking beverages business unit. “We have a long history of using the country’s biggest advertising stage to share a message of unity and positivity, especially at times when our nation feels divided,” he said in a statement.
- 1/24/2019
- by Brian Steinberg
- Variety Film + TV
Pepsi’s commercials featuring NBA star Kyrie Irving as the elderly basketball superstar Uncle Drew have become so popular that they decided to make a full-length movie out of it. Turning an idea for a 30-second advertisement into the basis for a full-length movie or TV series is the Hollywood equivalent of alchemy. But in our modern age of high-concept filmmaking, that hasn’t stopped studios from trying if they think an ad has a strong enough premise. Here are seven commercials that became something much more before “Uncle Drew.”
“Cavemen”: Probably one of the most infamous examples of commercials becoming a TV show. “Cavemen” was based off a series of Geico ads about modern-world cavemen insulted by the insurance company’s slogan “So easy a caveman could do it.”
The commercial’s creator, Joe Lawson, turned it into a sitcom in 2007 that aired on ABC, and it is...
“Cavemen”: Probably one of the most infamous examples of commercials becoming a TV show. “Cavemen” was based off a series of Geico ads about modern-world cavemen insulted by the insurance company’s slogan “So easy a caveman could do it.”
The commercial’s creator, Joe Lawson, turned it into a sitcom in 2007 that aired on ABC, and it is...
- 6/27/2018
- by Jeremy Fuster
- The Wrap
[CUSTOM_PLAYER_BRIGHTCOVE "4726505793001"] It's been nearly 40 years since a 9-year-old fan shared his Coca-Cola with Pittsburgh Steelers star "Mean" Joe Greene in one of the most famous commercials in Super Bowl history. Now the unlikely duo are reunited in a new video honoring the iconic ad and their enduring bond. In the clip, which was shot for the upcoming Super Bowl's Greatest Commercials 2016 special on CBS, the NFL legend and the all-grown-up Tommy Okon meet at Apogee Stadium in Denton, Texas. As the two reminisce about filming the Clio Award-winning commercial, which debuted in October 1979 and was notably aired again during Super Bowl Xiv...
- 1/28/2016
- by Tierney McAfee, @tierneymcafee
- PEOPLE.com
[CUSTOM_PLAYER_BRIGHTCOVE "4726505793001"] It's been nearly 40 years since a 9-year-old fan shared his Coca-Cola with Pittsburgh Steelers star "Mean" Joe Greene in one of the most famous commercials in Super Bowl history. Now the unlikely duo are reunited in a new video honoring the iconic ad and their enduring bond. In the clip, which was shot for the upcoming Super Bowl's Greatest Commercials 2016 special on CBS, the NFL legend and the all-grown-up Tommy Okon meet at Apogee Stadium in Denton, Texas. As the two reminisce about filming the Clio Award-winning commercial, which debuted in October 1979 and was notably aired again during Super Bowl Xiv...
- 1/28/2016
- by Tierney McAfee, @tierneymcafee
- PEOPLE.com
It's been nearly 40 years since a 9-year-old fan shared his Coca-Cola with Pittsburgh Steelers star "Mean" Joe Greene in one of the most famous commercials in Super Bowl history. Now the unlikely duo are reunited in a new video honoring the iconic ad and their enduring bond. In the clip, which was shot for the upcoming Super Bowl's Greatest Commercials 2016 special on CBS, the NFL legend and the all-grown-up Tommy Okon meet at Apogee Stadium in Denton, Texas. As the two reminisce about filming the Clio Award-winning commercial, which debuted in October 1979 and was notably aired again during Super Bowl Xiv...
- 1/28/2016
- by Tierney McAfee, @tierneymcafee
- PEOPLE.com
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