Many Super Bowl advertisements have become iconic and well known because of their quality, unpredictability, humor, and use of special effects. In recent years, advertisers have also attempted to stand out from others by producing ads with
cinematographic qualities, and ads that channel emotions and real-world issues. In 1973, lotion brand
Noxzema aired a commercial starring
Farrah Fawcett and quarterback
Joe Namath, featuring Namath being literally "creamed" by Fawcett. Later in the decade, Fawcett became better known for her role on the television series ''
Charlie's Angels''. At
Super Bowl XI in 1977,
Xerox aired an advertisement entitled "Monks"; starring
Jack Eagle as Brother Dominic—a monk discovering that he could create copies of a
manuscript using a new Xerox
photocopier.
Y&R New York's CEO Leslie Sims described "Monks" as being the "first viral ad," explaining that it "was the first commercial that got people to request to see it again on TV." To mark its 40th anniversary, a remake of the "Monks" ad premiered in January 2017 (although not as a Super Bowl ad), which updated its premise to feature the company's modern product line.
Master Lock: "Tough Under Fire" Among the most prominent of campaigns during early Super Bowl games were those of
Master Lock. In 1965, the company had first run a television commercial demonstrating the strength of its
padlocks, by having a person shoot it with a
handgun in a failed attempt to breach it. The campaign was pulled after the company's advertising director, Edson F. Allen realized the stunt could be imitated by those who were unsure of the commercial's authenticity. By the 1970s, Allen discussed the possibility of reviving the concept but using a
rifle rather than a handgun to make it harder to imitate. The resulting commercial would premiere in 1974 during
Super Bowl VIII; despite concerns by the staff of Master Lock and their agency,
Campbell Mithun, over the content of the ad, the commercial was well received by the general public. When
Cramer-Krasselt took over as Master Lock's agency later in the year, the company decided to make the gun ads a tradition and began to produce new ads themed around the concept (including one featuring skeptics of previous editions of the ad, and one showcasing the company's major corporate clients) for future Super Bowls during the subsequent decades (aside from a brief hiatus in 1986 and 1987), and the early 1990s. Allen went as far as describing the ads as an "event" that continued to attract media attention after the game. The Super Bowl ads helped improve Master Lock's market share; from 1973 through 1994, sales had increased from $35 million per year to $200 million per year. Master Lock's yearly Super Bowl commercials accounted for nearly all of the company's annual advertising budget.
Coca-Cola At
Super Bowl XIV in 1980,
Coca-Cola aired an advertisement popularly known as "
Hey Kid, Catch!", featuring
Pittsburgh Steelers All-Pro defensive lineman
"Mean Joe" Greene being offered a Coca-Cola by a young fan—played by Tommy Okon, The ad also became the subject of parodies on television series, such as
The Simpsons, and in other ads. At
Super Bowl XLIII in 2009, Coca-Cola aired a parody of the ad for its
Coca-Cola Zero brand starring Steelers
safety Troy Polamalu. Continuing an ongoing theme in the promotion of Coke Zero, the ad was interrupted by a Coca-Cola "brand manager" accusing Polamalu of "stealing" their commercial; in response, Polamalu tackled him and ripped off his shirt to give to the child. In 2012,
Procter & Gamble aired a parody of the ad entitled "Stinky." The ad saw Greene reprise his role, but having the young fan throw
Downy Unstoppables
fabric softener to Greene instead of Coca-Cola, and the fan rejecting his jersey because it smelled. In 2016, Joe Greene was reunited with Okon as part of a segment for CBS's ''Super Bowl's Greatest Commercials'' special. Coca-Cola has also used the Super Bowl for other campaigns: in 2009, the company aired new ads as part of its recently introduced
Open Happiness campaign. In 2021, amid the ongoing impact of the
COVID-19 pandemic in the United States, Coca-Cola announced that it would skip advertising at
Super Bowl LV "to ensure we are investing in the right resources during these unprecedented times."
Macintosh: "1984" computer (pictured), has been widely considered the best Super Bowl ad of all time. At
Super Bowl XVIII,
Apple Computer broadcast an advertisement for its
Macintosh computer entitled "1984", created by the agency
Chiat/Day and directed by
Ridley Scott. The advertisement, which incorporated elements inspired by the novel
Nineteen Eighty-Four, featured a woman wearing track-and-field clothing (including orange pants and a white shirt branded with an image of the Macintosh) sprinting into a large auditorium and hurling a large hammer into a screen (displaying a large
Big Brother-like figure speaking to a massive assembly of drone-like people in the audience), concluding with the message "On January 24, Apple Computer will introduce Macintosh. And you'll see why 1984 won’t be like '1984.'" The advertisement received critical acclaim from both viewers and critics alike for helping position the Macintosh as a unique entry into the
personal computer market and is often considered to be one of the best Super Bowl advertisements of all time. The ad first aired nationally during Super Bowl XVIII. As the agency wanted "1984" to be eligible for that year's industry awards, which were only open to ads that aired during 1983, a low-profile premiere of the ad occurred on the
Twin Falls, Idaho station
KMVT on December 31, 1983, shortly before midnight. Apple attempted to follow up "1984" the following year with a new ad entitled "
Lemmings", to promote its
Macintosh Office system. The ad which featured blindfolded businessmen walking over the edge of a cliff in unison, was criticized for its "dark" theme and exaggerated premise. "Lemmings" has been considered to be one of Apple's worst television advertisements.
Budweiser The
beer brand
Budweiser has long been a Super Bowl fixture. Its parent company
Anheuser-Busch held a long-term contract with the NFL that allowed it to buy several slots of air time from the game's broadcaster each year at a steep discount, a contract that ran through
Super Bowl 50; the company continues to buy multiple commercials in each game. Budweiser runs several advertising campaigns throughout each game, one of which has traditionally featured its mascots, the
Budweiser Clydesdales. The Clydesdales were included in at least one Super Bowl commercial every year from
Super Bowl IX in 1975 through
Super Bowl LI in 2017. As of 2015, Budweiser had won the survey thirteen times in fifteen years; its 2013 advertisement entitled "Brotherhood" focused on the relationship and emotional reunion of a
Clydesdale with its original trainer three years after leaving to become a Budweiser Clydesdale. Prior to the game, Budweiser also invited users to vote via
Twitter on a name for the new
foal that would be featured in the ad. Its third in a row, 2015's "Lost Dog", featured a dog being rescued from a wolf by the Clydesdales. This remained its most recent victory until 2025, which Budweiser won with "First Delivery". Anheuser-Busch denied that the ad was meant to be a political message, as it had been in production for the past year, and that it was meant to "highlight the ambition of our founder, Adolphus Busch, and his unrelenting pursuit of the American dream." In 2018, Budweiser broadcast "Stand by You", an ad that chronicled Anheuser-Busch's
disaster relief program of distributing cans of
drinking water from its brewery in
Cartersville, Georgia. The Clydesdales were, once again, downplayed from its television spots, with the brewery only airing a 5-second bumper in the second quarter to promote its streaming ClydesdaleCam event. However, the Clydesdales were featured in several digital-oriented companion campaigns alongside the game, including ClydesdaleCam, a second, web-exclusive ad entitled "Beer Country", as well as themed
Snapchat filters. The Clydesdales returned for Budweiser's 2019 ad, "Wind Never Felt Better", which promoted Anheuser-Busch's commitment to using
sustainable energy such as
wind power. Budweiser has introduced other campaigns during the Super Bowl as well. During
Super Bowl XXIII, Budweiser aired an episodic series of commercials known as the
Bud Bowl—which featured a football game between
stop motion-animated beer bottles representing Budweiser and
Bud Light, with commentary by
Bob Costas and
Paul Maguire. Proving popular, the
Bud Bowl would return at subsequent Super Bowls; it had become so popular that some viewers actually
wagered on the outcome of the
Bud Bowl as if it were an actual event. In 1995, Budweiser introduced the first of a series of ads featuring a group of three frogs named
Bud, Weis, and Er, which only croaked their respective names. The Budweiser Frogs became one of the brand's most popular campaigns and were expanded upon at
Super Bowl XXXII with a series of ads focusing on two wise-cracking lizards—Louie and Frankie—who found the frogs annoying and had hired a
ferret hitman to try and kill them. Anheuser-Busch has aired commercials for other beer brands during the game alongside Budweiser and Bud Light, such as
Beck's Sapphire and
Stella Artois. and broadcast a Bud Light ad featuring the ghost of its former dog mascot
Spuds MacKenzie. Michelob Ultra debuted for
Super Bowl LI, with an ad starring actor
Chris Pratt. Bud Light extended its medieval-themed advertising campaign (colloquially known as "
Dilly Dilly") to the Super Bowl in 2018, with the game featuring the debut of "The Bud Knight"—the third installment of a "trilogy" of ads that led into the game (with the second, "Ye Olde Pep Talk", having premiered during the conference championship games but also re-aired during the Super Bowl). Anheuser-Busch made its largest-ever advertising purchase for
Super Bowl LIII, with eight ads (one 60-second spot, four 45-second spots, and the remaining being 30-second spots) covering seven products in five brands—including Budweiser, Bud Light, Bon & Viv Spiked Seltzer, Michelob Ultra, and Stella Artois. Bud Light's medieval campaign continued into Super Bowl LIII, with an ad attacking its competitors for their use of
high fructose corn syrup, and the latter featuring a crossover with the
HBO series
Game of Thrones. For
Super Bowl LIV, the company only purchased four 60-second spots, with one advertising both Bud Light and
Bud Light Seltzer. Amid the ongoing impact of the
COVID-19 pandemic in the United States, it was announced that Budweiser itself would not air an ad during
Super Bowl LV in 2021 (its first absence in 37 years), choosing to donate the estimated cost of a Super Bowl ad to the
Ad Council to fund awareness campaigns for
COVID-19 vaccines, and launch a digital campaign that would also promote vaccination. However, Anheuser-Busch still aired spots for other brands during the game, as well as its first-ever commercial for Anheuser-Busch as a company, with a total spend roughly the same as 2020. at
Super Bowl XLV, Chrysler aired a two-minute-long ad entitled "
Born of Fire" to launch the
Chrysler 200 and the company's new slogan "Imported from Detroit." The ad featured scenes depicting the history and revitalization of
Detroit, as well as local rapper
Eminem and his song "
Lose Yourself." The ad was critically acclaimed and won a
Creative Arts Emmy Award for "Best Commercial" in 2011. During
Super Bowl XLVI, Chrysler broadcast "Halftime in America", a two-minute-long commercial directed by
David Gordon Green, written by poet
Matthew Dickman and narrated by actor
Clint Eastwood. The commercial recounted the
automotive industry crisis of 2008–10, set to scenes showing Americans in despair, but then in hope. The narration of the ad likened the emergence from the crisis to the second half of a football game, explaining that "All that matters now is what’s ahead: how do we come from behind? How do we come together? And how do we win? Detroit’s showing us it can be done. And what’s true about them is true about all of us. This country can’t be knocked out with one punch. We get right back up again, and when we do the world’s gonna hear the roar of our engines." The ad was heavily viewed online after the game, receiving over 4 million views on
YouTube within 36 hours, but also attracted
controversy due to its political overtones.
Super Bowl XLVII featured an ad for
Ram Trucks, which adapted
Paul Harvey's 1978 speech "
So God Made a Farmer." During
Super Bowl 50, the company focused exclusively on its SUV brand
Jeep. At
Super Bowl LI, the company similarly focused exclusively on
Alfa Romeo, as part of a campaign to re-launch the Fiat-owned brand in the United States.
Super Bowl LII featured two Ram Trucks commercials, the latter featuring an extract from a 1968 speech by
Martin Luther King Jr., as well as three Jeep ads. The
Jeep Gladiator was the focus of a spot during
Super Bowl LIV, starring actor
Bill Murray reprising his role from the film
Groundhog Day (appropriately, given the
scheduling of that year's game). Jeep had its first-ever victory on the Super Bowl Ad Meter survey with the ad.
The Dot-com Super Bowl Super Bowl XXXIV (2000) became notable for featuring a large number of commercials from
dot-com companies, to the extent that critics dubbed it the "Dot-com Super Bowl" as a result. With a 30-second ad costing around $2.2 million, 20% of the commercial time sold went to dot-com companies—constituting $44 million of the $130 million spent in total on Super Bowl advertising time that year.
Electronic Data Systems aired an ad themed around
cowboys who herded cats instead of cows.
Doritos In 2006,
Doritos began holding a promotion known as
Crash the Super Bowl, soliciting viewers to film their own Doritos commercials to possibly be aired during the game. At
Super Bowl XLIII in 2009, an additional bonus prize of $1 million was added if any of the winning entries were named #1 on the Super Bowl Ad Meter survey results; Doritos would reach the #1 spot on the survey that year with an ad entitled "Free Doritos", created by Joe and Dave Herbert of
Batesville,
Indiana. The ad featured an office worker attempting to fulfill a prediction that he would receive free Doritos by smashing open a
vending machine with a
crystal ball. Another user-submitted Doritos ad, "The Cowboy Kid", finished in second place on the Ad Meter survey in 2014, winning $50,000. The contest itself was won by "Time Machine"; created by Ryan Thomas Andersen of
Arizona and produced on a budget of only $300, the ad featured his son
scamming his neighbor into giving him his bag of Doritos by claiming that he had built a
time machine that was fueled by them. For winning the contest, Anderson received $1 million and an opportunity to work on set during the production of the film
Avengers: Age of Ultron.
GoDaddy The
domain registrar and
web hosting company
GoDaddy was well known for producing Super Bowl commercials featuring female spokespersons it dubbed "GoDaddy Girls", such as professional driver
Danica Patrick, and for its 2011 ad, comedian
Joan Rivers. In 2008, a GoDaddy ad entitled "Exposure" was rejected by Fox for using the word "
beaver" as a
double entendre. In turn, the ad was replaced with one advertising the availability of the ad on GoDaddy's website, attracting two million visits. In October 2013, GoDaddy's chief marketing officer Barb Rechterman announced that the company would no longer air provocative ads during the Super Bowl, explaining that "our new brand of Super Bowl commercials will make it crystal clear what we do and who we stand for. We may be changing our approach, but as we've always said, we don't care what the critics think. We are all about our customers." GoDaddy's ad in 2015, "Journey Home", was controversial for different reasons: it featured a puppy traveling back to its owner after falling out of a pickup truck, only to learn that he had been sold to a new owner using a website built with GoDaddy. The ad was criticized by animal rights groups, who felt that it implied an endorsement of commercial
puppy mills. GoDaddy quickly pulled the ad in response to the controversy; GoDaddy CEO
Blake Irving explained that the ad's humor had "clearly missed the mark."
PETA partially praised the ad for portraying the seller as being a "callous jerk," but explained that "The sale of animals online and from pet stores and breeders should be roundly condemned, and it was today. GoDaddy did the right thing by swiftly promoting adoption."
Tide Procter & Gamble has used the Super Bowl to promote its
Tide detergent; the brand debuted in 2008 with "Talking Stain", a campaign promoting Tide To Go. Tide aired an episodic three-part ad during
Super Bowl LI that starred
Fox NFL Sunday co-host
Terry Bradshaw, where he discovers a stain on his shirt right before going on air from Fox's set at
NRG Stadium, prompting him to—as seen in a second commercial later in the game—quickly travel to
Jeffrey Tambor's house so he could clean it with Tide.
Rob Gronkowski is also featured in the campaign, including the pre-Super Bowl teasers where Gronkowski runs a laundromat with Tambor as an unhappy client. In the conclusion (aired near the end of the game), Bradshaw makes it back to the game, only for his colleague
Curt Menefee to spill coffee on his shirt, with Tambor (who is watching from home) refusing to help again. To make the sequence plausibly live, the ad was filmed over the weeks immediately after the Conference Championship Games, and required P&G's agency to construct a replica of Fox's actual on-field set for the game as well as for Bradshaw and Menefee to don the same attire from the ad for the actual broadcast. Visual effects were used to correctly reflect the look of the stadium and the teams participating in the game. During
Super Bowl LII, Tide aired a series of commercials starring
David Harbour, which presented several types of commercials that viewers often see during the Super Bowl, only to reveal that they are all actually commercials for Tide because all of their clothes are perfectly clean. Some of the commercials included crossovers with ads for other Procter & Gamble products, including a
Mr. Clean ad aired during Super Bowl LI, and
Old Spice's "
The Man Your Man Could Smell Like" ad.
"Small Business Big Game" As a byproduct of the increased cost of ad time at the Super Bowl, financial software company
Intuit made its debut at
Super Bowl XLVIII by hosting a promotion known as "Small Business Big Game", in which
small businesses with "inspiring" stories competed for a chance to earn a commercial during the Super Bowl funded by Intuit, as decided by user votes. Company CEO
Brad D. Smith explained that the promotion was an extension of the company's goals to improve financial lives "in a way that you'd never imagine going back," while Ken Wach, senior vice president of marketing for Intuit's Small Business Group, explained that "normally you're looking at Budweiser ads or Chevy ads, so this was about putting small businesses on the national stage and shining the spotlight on them as heroes of the economy." While the campaign was a success for the winner, resulting in increased prominence and sales, Wach felt that Intuit was not able to "sustain the momentum as much as we would have liked." At
Super Bowl XLIX, Intuit did not hold the promotion, but still aired an ad for its own
TurboTax product.
"I'm going to Disney World!" Disney Parks is known for an advertising campaign associated with the Super Bowl entitled "What's Next?", but more popularly known as "
I'm going to Disney World!" The ads feature a player from the winning team (typically the
MVP) responding with the eponymous declaration after being asked what they would do after the game. These ads typically premiere on the day after the Super Bowl. The series began following
Super Bowl XXI, and first featured
Phil Simms of the
New York Giants. Disney has reportedly offered players $30,000 if they participate in the commercial and visit a Disney theme park (usually
Disney World or
Disneyland) afterward, and has extended the campaign to champion players in other sports. At
Super Bowl XL (broadcast by corporate sister
ABC), Disney aired an in-game commercial themed around the campaign, featuring
Pittsburgh Steelers and
Seattle Seahawks players rehearsing the line in case they won.
Cryptocurrency Super Bowl LVI (2022) featured a number of
cryptocurrency exchanges making their debut as advertisers, including
Coinbase,
Crypto.com,
eToro, and
FTX on the American telecast, and
BitPay on the Canadian telecast. Comparisons were made to the
wave of dot-com ads at Super Bowl XXXIV, with the game being dubbed the "Crypto Bowl" by some media outlets. FTX's ad featured comedian and actor
Larry David (in his first appearance in a commercial) in
period costume dismissing various technological and societal achievements in history, including the
wheel,
American independence,
Edison's
incandescent light bulb, the
Walkman, and finally, cryptocurrency. The ad was directed by
Jeff Schaffer, whom David had worked with in the past on
Seinfeld and
Curb Your Enthusiasm. Ironically,
the company would go bankrupt later that year. In contrast, Coinbase aired an unusual 60-second ad consisting only of a
QR code bouncing across a black,
screensaver-like screen. When scanned, the code redirected users to a web page advertising a promotion and giveaway for new customers. Coinbase's website promptly crashed, having received 20 million hits within a minute. The ad was quickly parodied later in the night by
Meta Quest, which posted a similar ad on social media to advertise a streaming
Foo Fighters VR concert after the game, captioned "Hopefully this doesn't break." Besides ads from crypto exchanges, several other ads made allusions to cryptocurrency and related concepts such as
non-fungible tokens (NFTs), including those of TurboTax and Bud Light Next respectively.
Artificial intelligence At
Super Bowl LX (2026), many of the commercials aired during the broadcast garnered negative attention either for being advertisements for companies and products that specialize in or utilize
generative artificial intelligence such as
Google Gemini,
Microsoft Copilot and
ChatGPT or were made using generative AI. One such ad that received negative reception was for
Ring doorbells that encouraged using the camera's AI abilities to help locate missing animals, which was derided as being creepy and triggering concerns regarding potential invasions of privacy. Shortly after the
halftime show, the vodka brand
Svedka aired a commercial that served as a revival of their Fembot mascots that was created using artificial intelligence. The AI powered workspace tool Genspark aired a commercial starring
Matthew Broderick in which Broderick urges viewers to take the Monday following the game off from work and instead use Genspark to complete tasks for that day. The ad was written entirely by AI and reportedly was completed in only five weeks. == Local advertising during the Super Bowl ==