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The Big Game: Analyzing the Commercials in ELA

A little bit touching, a little bit thought-provoking, and a whole lot funny – Super Bowl commercials are rich with material for lessons.   Since I’m an English teacher, I see these commercials as the perfect opportunity to cover persuasive appeals, rhetorical devices, literary techniques, and even media choices.  I’m sure we all have our favorites for different reasons, but the ones I linked below are the ones I love because I am that nerdy English teacher!  I’ve compiled them all in one place for you, so all the research is done.  If you haven’t covered Common Core R.7 or SL.2 yet, the Super Bowl would be the perfect opportunity to do so AND make a real-world connection.  Your cool teacher rating? 10 out of 10!  This lesson always “scores big” with my classes!

1) 2013 Dodge “So God Made a Farmer” with Paul Harvey narrating

Teaching Notes: While Paul Harvey might be an out-of-date reference for most teens today, for older generations, that voice is immediately recognizable – thus, providing a sense of ethos or credibility to the Dodge Ram automatically. Also, the commercial banks largely on pathos or emotional appeal using the techniques of  transfer with patriotic images sprinkled throughout and loaded words with lines such as “God made a farmer…. to work hard, to stay up late, to participate on the school board, etc.” Even though it seems that this commercial is targeting only the one audience – farmers – it illustrates beautifully the core of the American Dream: hard work.  That is a claim that connects with any audience.

2) Budweiser Clydesdale “Puppy Love” 2014
Teaching Notes: It seems like Budweiser always tugs at the heartstrings with those beautiful horses every year, and they’ve done it again this time by doubling the cuteness factor. This example actually went on my Top 5 Fav list by request of my students.  They loved it, and for good reason.  It is dripping with pathos from the adorable puppy to the lyrics of the song.  Also, the final call to action screenshot employs a pun, and if it’s punny, I’m a fan! #bestbuds  – used to pull together the theme of the commercial and to make that final push of the product.  Genius, right?

 

3) Monster.com“When I Grow Up” 2008

Teaching Notes: Wow. This is one really makes you stop and think.  Not only is this one an excellent example for pathos, but the underlying dark logic used here with the faulty comparison, “you must go after your dreams or be stuck in a job you hate,” is definitely an “in your face” type approach. Also, important to note is the choice of the black and white color scheme that darkens the mood even further.  I like that this commercial works perfectly for an ELA class, but it would also work well in a personal finance class for preparing for your future and goal setting or even for discussion in a human services class.

4) “Cat Herding” (2000) EDS.com

Teaching Notes: I tend to really, really enjoy dry humor and verbal irony, so I had to double check the funny factor of this one with my students. They agreed that it is a solid choice for funny!  When the two cowboys are discussing their “injuries,” I am laughing so hard I can barely breathe – maybe that’s because I can relate to the cat-herding feeling as a teacher some days!  This one is definitely tickling the funny bone, which falls into the pathos category, and I also enjoy the metaphor used for the company’s goal of pulling all sorts of information together in one place.

5) “Middle Seat” – Doritos 2015

Teaching Note: This fan-made ad from 2015 is stop, drop, and roll hilarious.   If you’ve ever flown, you know that fear of not knowing who is going to be sitting beside you.  The struggle is definitely real! I appreciate the creativity here, and it’s a perfect example of situational irony.  Of all his antics in this one, it’s hard to choose which one is the most outlandish – maybe the flossing or toe-nail clipping… shudder!

 

Hop over to my TPT store to get my FREE Big Game Commercial Analysis, updated 2019!

Here are a couple more of of my favorites…

– Coca-Cola Make It Happy Coca Cola, 2016
 – Suntrust, On Up, 2016 (This is my new FAVORITE! Like, really, Suntrust, you nailed it!)
– Fiji, Nature’s Gift, 2017

  – Honda, Dream On, 2017 (being the yearbook sponsor, this one had to make my list!)

  – NFL, Inside These Lines, 2017

 

Love this content? Join a group!  There are already tons of ideas, freebies, and fabulous teachers in my new groups, and joining is simple.  Just click over to the following links, answer a few questions, and voila! Thanks again for following along my classroom stories and small-business journey, and I really do hope you to see you over in my new “backyards” where we can chat and share all things English and Yearbook.

Filed Under: Common Core SL.2, digital text analysis, football, logical fallacies, persuasive appeals, propaganda, R7, real world connection, super bowl, the big game, Uncategorized 1 Comment

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