Sausages’ to Receive Super Bowl Water Cooler Action?

sausages_bud_light.jpg

It’s unclear whether or not this Bud Light Ability to Talk to Animals spot will make an appearance during the Super Bowl but if it does, there could be a lot of sausage talk at the office the next day. Along with graceful shots of the product, this DDB Chicago-created Bud Light commercial starts off innocuously enough touting the beer’s taste. It then suddenly shifts to a man and his dog in the kitchen. Sadly, it seems, Bud Light’s ability to give one the power to talk to animals is no more. Sadly, the dog doesn’t know this and continues to beg for sausages over and over and over…and over again.

It’s stupid humor like this that gives this spot a chance at Wassup notoriety.

Picture of Steve Hall

Steve Hall

RECENT ARTICLES

TRENDING AROUND THE WEB

Psychology says the reason older adults talk to their pets with more honesty than they talk to their families isn’t eccentricity, it’s that the animal offers something almost no human relationship can sustain—complete emotional availability without judgment, agenda, or the possibility that today’s vulnerability will be referenced in tomorrow’s argument

Psychology says the reason older adults talk to their pets with more honesty than they talk to their families isn’t eccentricity, it’s that the animal offers something almost no human relationship can sustain—complete emotional availability without judgment, agenda, or the possibility that today’s vulnerability will be referenced in tomorrow’s argument

Global English Editing

Nobody talks about the version of loneliness that lives inside a perfectly fine marriage—the kind where nothing is wrong, nobody is cruel, the partnership functions exactly as designed—but somewhere around year twenty-five one person realized they’d been having their most honest conversations in their own head

Nobody talks about the version of loneliness that lives inside a perfectly fine marriage—the kind where nothing is wrong, nobody is cruel, the partnership functions exactly as designed—but somewhere around year twenty-five one person realized they’d been having their most honest conversations in their own head

Global English Editing

The Boomer generation that could sit through a three-hour family dinner without once reaching for a screen developed a tolerance for unstructured time that most people under 40 now medicate, distract, or schedule away—and behavioral scientists say that tolerance is one of the strongest predictors of emotional stability in later life

The Boomer generation that could sit through a three-hour family dinner without once reaching for a screen developed a tolerance for unstructured time that most people under 40 now medicate, distract, or schedule away—and behavioral scientists say that tolerance is one of the strongest predictors of emotional stability in later life

Global English Editing

I’m 73 and the thing that keeps me up at night isn’t fear of dying—it’s the possibility that my children will clean out this house in a weekend and not understand that every drawer, every shelf, every pile they’ll throw away was a sentence in a conversation I was trying to have with them

I’m 73 and the thing that keeps me up at night isn’t fear of dying—it’s the possibility that my children will clean out this house in a weekend and not understand that every drawer, every shelf, every pile they’ll throw away was a sentence in a conversation I was trying to have with them

Global English Editing

I’m 63 and I nursed other people’s pain for forty-four years and the thing I never told anyone is that I learned how to hold space for everyone else’s suffering by completely forgetting that mine was supposed to count too

I’m 63 and I nursed other people’s pain for forty-four years and the thing I never told anyone is that I learned how to hold space for everyone else’s suffering by completely forgetting that mine was supposed to count too

Global English Editing

8 things about my husband I only understood after forty years of marriage—and wished I’d known by year five

8 things about my husband I only understood after forty years of marriage—and wished I’d known by year five

Global English Editing