There’s something a little bit special about an ad you don’t want to mute.
Ads, after all, are intended to sell. By definition, companies and individuals use them to influence the way we feel about a certain product or line of thinking.
Most of the time, however, they don’t succeed. The finished product that hits our screen comes across as tacky and contrived and elicits little more than an eye roll and mash of the ‘mute’ button.
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Then there are exceptions. Every now and then we come across an ad that makes us laugh – not smirk – but genuinely cackle; an ad that makes us feel ashamed, or guilty at the effect we’re having on the environment; an ad that vindicates and lifts and makes the hair on our body stand on end.
Those ads – the ones that make us tingle and cover us in goosebumps – are few and far between.
Here are five TV advertisements that made us feel; five TV advertisements we can’t erase from our minds.
1. The Spirit of Australia – QANTAS, 2009
QANTAS’ ‘Spirit of Australia’ campaign went through several renditions in the 2000s, each one more spine-tingling than the next.
It’s not often an ad makes us proud of our nationality; proud to be Aussie. But the QANTAS Choir, their rendition of I Still Call Australia Home, and the mind-blowing cinematography of the Australian landscape managed to do just that.
Top Comments
Even more: Matthew Krock and the sorbent toilet paper ad, chum so chu'mpy you can arve it, gogo mobile, NOT HAPPY, JAN!!, I could go on and on. Also forgetting the Carlton whatever it was ad, any Fourex ad or VB ad, or that ad for that beer (forget which one) with the famous song that repeats itself where the tongue drops from the guys mouth and out and grabs a stubbie then jumps back in the mouth 'till I get my...satisfaction' song.
Slip, slop slap. Norm "life be in it".
You should have asked me to compile the list, lol the list in the article is pathetic.
Substitute the Carlton ad (never seen or heard of it before, ever) for the GRIM REAPER ads of the 80s. Seriously, that should have been NUMBER ONE! For it not to be in the list at all, let alone number one, given a couple in the list are barely even remarkable or widely known, is unbelievable.
Then there is 'shrimp on the barbie', Expo 88 and bicentenary, etc etc. The 'Lamb' ad was passable but nowhere near memorable or brilliant.
The Mrs Marsh/chalk/toothpaste ad, I could go on and on. Leaves the 'list' in the article in the dust.