Very rough draft with no intro or conclusion:
In the first ad, the Nissan 2015
Super Bowl commercial, titled "With Dad", follows the life of a man
as a father. Throughout the commercial, the man is forced to live his life
divided between his car racing career and his family back home. After his son is
born, the man finds it harder and harder to continue with his career and he
begins to feel regrets about missing so much of his son's life while he is away
racing. Also shown are pieces of the son's life as he grows up watching his
father on the television instead of having him at home. It ends with the father
retire from his racing career and coming home to his son. When the father comes home and goes to pick up his son in their new Nissan, there is an overwhelming feeling of relief. The son is not only glad to have his father home, but also that he is safe, and the man is obviously relieved that he will no longer be missing out on life with his son. The company is very clearly stating that they are about more than just a car, they are invested in the consumer's life and values.
Nissan
is very clearly trying to reach out to anyone with, or planning on having, a
family. It speaks to the average car owner, not just as a family man (or woman)
but as a regular human being. True, most people don’t have such an exciting or
dangerous job as a racer, but everyone, at some point, feels like they miss
part of their lives because of other obligations. This message is emphasized by
the cast of the commercial. Everyone shown is a regular person doing regular
things, there are no celebrities telling the viewers they can appear just as successful
by driving this car. In the background,
there is a familiar, melancholy song playing that perfectly parallels the
emotions of the characters and those that any parent would feel as they watch their
child grow up.
The next example, the Kia Matrix commercial
from the 2014 Super Bowl, is a little less direct with their message, and a
little sillier. It shows an attractive couple who, as they leave a date, meet
the character Morpheus from The Matrix.
He offers the couple the chance to old luxuries and new. At first the couple
are content with what they have, they just want their car so they can leave,
and like most people they seem a little dubious about a taking advice from a peculiar
stranger. However, once they are in the new Kia, they experience a new brand of
luxury and quickly realize that what they had before was not nearly as amazing
as what they could have.
Though the term “luxury” is
normally associated with success, the ad still does it’s best to entice an
audience of regular people. True most people won’t encounter Morpheus just on
the street, or have a stranger offer them such an extreme gift, but on average
most people experience something similar to the emotions hinted at in the ad.
It is fairly common to feel flustered, or maybe even tricked when trying to
make a big decision like buying a care. No matter how many questions are asked,
the seller may have left something out, and the buyer may then feel like they
haven’t gotten what they really wanted. This commercial plays on that fear, it
suggests that the audience has been deceived, and whether they were content in
the past, they can only be dissatisfied now that they have been exposed to the
truth. It is not unusual for people to want to feel good about themselves and
their possessions, to want to treat themselves to a least some luxury in their
lives.
Lastly, in Matthew McConaughey’s
2014 commercial “Intro” for the Lincoln MKC, we again see the theme of self-satisfaction.
While driving his Lincoln MKC, McConaughey talks about reflecting on life,
knowing where you came from. He drives through a city at night. To no one in
particular, he talks about "going back" and knowing where you came
from. He mentions that some people think you shouldn't reflect on life, that
that doesn't get you anywhere, but he disagrees. Looking back provides you with
insight into who you are and by extension what you want. The whole commercial
is about the viewer as an individual.
Unlike the other two, this ad shows
only a celebrity face, but that of a well-known actor that many people admire.
Like the other two ads, though, the message is still for any viewer who can
drive. The whole commercial talks about the person in the driver’s seat, never are
the features or benefits of thee car directly mentioned. It is only suggested
this car is great because a great person is driving it. It also suggests that
that greatness is achieved not through heroic action or fame, it is reached
through being your own person and living your life without regret. Similarly to
the first commercial, Lincoln is trying to show the viewer that they care more
about the individual’s values than about how great the car is. The commercial makes
a very personal statement about and individual's life and values, showing this
car is not about how much money you make, but what you want in life. It
suggests that it’s not the car that makes the person great, but that the driver
deserves something as great as they are, merely because they are their own
person.
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