cal331
Jan 7, 2004 @ 9:26 pm
Which car commercial has been using the Who's "Happy Jack"?
Hummer.
DoctorNeon
Jan 7, 2004 @ 10:12 pm
Hardee's (which I have to drive 6 miles down the road to) is advertising its low-carb burgers. A big sloppy burger wrapped in lettuce. Mmm!! It's as gross as Edwardo's pizza feature health-nut pizza. The Bella Basil:It's crust, basil leaves, and butter. Delicious!! Mmmm! At least Hardee's knows that they suck and they admit it in their commercials that they're trying not to suck. Personally, I miss Burger Chef®.
Ruby Vroom
Jan 7, 2004 @ 10:42 pm
why does the cotton industry feel the need to advertise The touch. The Feel. Of Cotton?
Seriously! This has mystified me for
years. That, and the "Plastics will save your life and end world hunger and bring peace to the universe and make your teeth whiter" ads. What purpose do they serve? Who are they trying to convince? Are there really that many people intentionally
not buying plastic/cotton? Is there somebody out there who, until seeing the Touch/Feel commercial, was strictly a rayon consumer? Guh.
On the other hand, I am shamefacedly in love with the ads for the Honda minivan with the 30something man/woman with 2.5 kids, dog, Hot Spouse, etc. running into an old friend from high school who's stuck in the 80s. It's the music that gets me. I can't help it. God help me, a
minivan commercial makes me want to get up and dance stupidly around the room.
thinkcwik
Jan 7, 2004 @ 11:36 pm
Okay, I was watching Angel last night when I got home from work (thank jeebus for my DVR.) While FFing thru the commercials, I saw something that made me rewind and watch.
A preteen girl is speed talking about boys and friends while braiding someone's hair. Cut to Sprint guy is listening sympathetically as an older man says that night minutes don't start until 9:00, so she talks to them. Wide shot of the old guy with braids all over his head a la Coolio. Another shot catches older lady, mom, dad and dog all sporting Coolio hair as the girl babbles incessantly. Man looks at the clock rolling up on 7:00 with a sigh, and Sprint guy tells them that evening minutes begin at 7:00. Cut to relieved family.
Sprint commercials rule. "I said SHAMPOO, not SHAMU!"
slaughteredlamb
Jan 7, 2004 @ 11:40 pm
Low-carb bread? Something about that just strikes me as wrong.
I live on something even worse: flourless, organic sprout bread. There are reasons why some things just aren't advertised. But, seriously, yum.
Pizza Hut also has (which oddly, just started running as soon as I typed these words) a commercial advertising their 6 new "Fit and Delicious Pizzas".
Personally, I'd like to be able to watch one commercial break without getting the whole "LOSE WEIGHT WITH US!!!! OR DIE FAT AND LONELY!!!!!" messege beat into me. I appriciate that companies are starting to notice that healthy food is needed, but would it kill them to actually come up with
good healthy food that was actually, well, healthy? Oh well, it's cheaper to make it myself.
LinaBo
Jan 7, 2004 @ 11:50 pm
Okay, am I imagining things, or did I catch the end of a Subway commercial advertising an 'Atkins wrap'???
Isaboe
Jan 7, 2004 @ 11:55 pm
Okay, am I imagining things, or did I catch the end of a Subway commercial advertising an 'Atkins wrap'???
Nope, you're not. It's out there. They put bacon and chicken in it. And whatever else you want to cram in there. I'm guessing the chicken offsets the badness of the bacon?
LinaBo
Jan 8, 2004 @ 12:00 am
So I guess it's just an ordinary wrap, and all of the protein is supposed to overshadow the 'badness' of the flour in the tortilla? and they slapped the Atkins label on it for advertising purposes?
When I saw it, I thought 'WTF? What happened to the Subway diet, you hypocrites? Where's the faith???'
DoctorNeon
Jan 8, 2004 @ 12:36 am
Atkins is all about high-fat, almost no carbohydrates sort of thing. I would say it utilizes the concept of Ketosis.So bacon and pork rinds are okay.
Topic:Bojangles commercials here in the South are getting dangerously close to Adam Sandler's "Clucky Chicken" sketch on SNL.
Jamoche
Jan 8, 2004 @ 1:52 am
Pizza Hut also has (which oddly, just started running as soon as I typed these words) a commercial advertising their 6 new "Fit and Delicious Pizzas".
I can remember when pizza was relatively healthy - before 90% of the pizza was cheese.
Lucky Bishop
Jan 8, 2004 @ 3:07 am
While I don't know the specifics of Townsend's ownership of these songs- often times the record label retains rights to the song (or a particular performance or version of a song) and may 'rent' them to whatever company they like.
In many cases, yes, but they still need the permission of whoever owns the publishing rights, who is usually someone else entirely. (For example, Michael Jackson and ATV/Sony co-own the publishing rights to most Beatles songs.) However, Pete Townshend owns his own publishing: even back in the '60s, he knew that that was where the money was.
On the other hand, I am shamefacedly in love with the ads for the Honda minivan with the 30something man/woman with 2.5 kids, dog, Hot Spouse, etc. running into an old friend from high school who's stuck in the 80s. It's the music that gets me. I can't help it. God help me, a minivan commercial makes me want to get up and dance stupidly around the room.
Ruby (Soul Coughing fan, eh?), you're missing a key point: the person they run into is THEMSELVES at age 17! That's why the person is yelling at them for getting such a bad haircut and an uncool car.
That song, by the way, is Yaz's "Don't Go," a favorite of mine since I myself was a snotty '80s kid.
2222
Jan 8, 2004 @ 3:09 am
The new Citibank (I think) commercial is hilarious. I'm a horrible explainer but I'll try my best. In it, the guy's sitting in his living room facing the camera with the tv turned on in the background. And when he starts to talk, this valley-girl voice comes out and he goes on about this great expensive outfit he bought at the mall. Bascially, it's about missing identities and credit cards. The combination of the voice and the happy expression on the guy's face makes me stop and watch it everytime.
I've also noticed a woman and man in a lot of Canadian commericals, they're in the Future Shop Christmas commercial together, the couple where the woman gave the man a gift card and he's pretending it to be a cell phone, camera, palm pilot..etc. I see them everywhere, although I can't think of any particular ones. Oh! The woman in the Aero "Bubbles" commercial.
ubi
Jan 8, 2004 @ 4:45 am
On the other hand, I am shamefacedly in love with the ads for the Honda minivan with the 30something man/woman with 2.5 kids, dog, Hot Spouse, etc. running into an old friend from high school who's stuck in the 80s. It's the music that gets me. I can't help it.
Like someone else said, it's sppsd to be himself from twenty years ago (gah! I feel so old now). I think there's something Freudian about meeting your 20-years-ago self, but I'm not a pyschologist... though I did sleep at a Holiday Inn Express once.
A preteen girl is speed talking about boys and friends while braiding someone's hair. Cut to Sprint guy is listening sympathetically as an older man says that night minutes don't start until 9:00, so she talks to them. Wide shot of the old guy with braids all over his head a la Coolio. Another shot catches older lady, mom, dad and dog all sporting Coolio hair as the girl babbles incessantly. Man looks at the clock rolling up on 7:00 with a sigh, and Sprint guy tells them that evening minutes begin at 7:00. Cut to relieved family.
Ah, you beat me to it! How about the one with the guy looking at the ugly monster in the room with the Sprint Guy? I didn't have the sound on so I have no idea what they were talking about, but the man did try to take its picture with his cellphone (I guess).
Justin Cognito
Jan 8, 2004 @ 6:26 am
I also have the FF X-2 song in my head. I can sing it all, and if I'm not mistaken my 1 yr. old is trying to learn it. I haven't learned the words to the slower version though.
...I won't give in to it now. I know that forward is the only way my heart can go. I hear your voice calling out to me. You'll never be alone (do-do-dodododoooo)I'm sorry, I'll stop.
Okay, that does it. Now I have to buy the damn game. Or should I get FFX first? (I've never played one of the games in my life, but I hear they're really good.)
absolutelyisis
Jan 8, 2004 @ 8:11 am
Personally, I miss Burger Chef®.
My dad was a Burger Chef® manager when I was a kid. We had "barstools" made out of pickle buckets and decorated with pictures from the discontinued cardboard signs. (On our patio, not at the Burger Chef®!)
Burger Chef® commercials:
Burger Chef® and Jeff,
Burgerilla, and someone please tell what the vampire's name was!
Thanks to Burger Chef®, we have a picture of our dad with Archie Manning! Some people say "Wow, is that Archie Manning?" We say "Look how cheap the burgers were - and how skinny Dad was!"
archbrow
Jan 8, 2004 @ 9:03 am
That song, by the way, is Yaz's "Don't Go," a favorite of mine since I myself was a snotty '80s kid.
Lucky Bishop, isn't it Yaz's "Move Out?" I actually played keyboards on that song, in a snotty '80s kid cover band. Hee! I could be wrong... those Yaz songs are all deliciously catchy, but eerily similar. I think they're all written in the same key, or something.
Ruby Vroom, don't feel bad. It took me like 3 or 4 viewings before I got that the 80s guy is himself in the good old days. I totally thought it was someone else too!
FfrauleinN
Jan 8, 2004 @ 9:22 am
I think those cotton ads are called something like "good faith ads." If I'm not mistaken, synthetic materials tend to be cheaper, so the Cotton People are all, Hey remember the look and feel of cotton? It's not just for casual Fridays anymore! I like the old ad with Daisy Fuentes (and Ivana Trump, I think) and the heavy guitar music better than these new ones with people dancing on hotel furniture and shit.
The new Sprint ad is cool, but I'm confused about why the little girl is braiding everyone's hair just because she's talking on the phone so much.
Shem the Penman
Jan 8, 2004 @ 9:43 am
Okay, that does it. Now I have to buy the damn game. Or should I get FFX first? (I've never played one of the games in my life, but I hear they're really good.)
Playing FFX first would be better, since a lot of the fun of X-2 (for me at least) is going, "hey, I remember that obscure character/place/in-joke from last time." But be prepared to have huge amounts of your life sucked away; I think it took me about 60-70 hours to finish FFX, and I don't think X-2 will be much faster.
Has anyone actually tried one of those Subway Atkins wraps? I think Atkins is a bunch of hooey (I stick to the "don't eat so much crap and get off your ass sometimes" program, myself), but the bacon and turkey one looks pretty good.
devajd
Jan 8, 2004 @ 9:45 am
I've had the turkey bacon wrap at Subway - long before they ever started calling it an "Atkins Wrap". It's really good, especially with the Southwest Sauce.
Topic? Uhhh - damn. No commercials have made an impression on me. But that Pepsi Vanilla ad with the tricked out truck drives me nuts.
Tornado25
Jan 8, 2004 @ 9:48 am
How about the one with the guy looking at the ugly monster in the room with the Sprint Guy? I didn't have the sound on so I have no idea what they were talking about, but the man did try to take its picture with his cellphone (I guess).
I think it's supposed to be the boogeyman. I heard the ad, albeit in a bar during the Packers game, so what do I know? Anyway, the guy is all like "Ha, now I can prove you do exist". Boogeyman is all like "Psshh, you can't figure that thing out, dumbass". Sprint guy appears with easy-to-use pic phone. The ad is ala the Bigfoot ad we saw a bit back.
Ad campaigns like this are somewhat odd. It's like there are 2 separate campaigns at the same time that are strangely similiar in their quirkiness. I know they are ads for 2 different concepts, but still. Like Subway has 2 ad campaigns, one is WWJD and the other is "It's ok". While I know they are advertising different ideas about Subway, I can't help but thinking "Hmm, one of these must have been from the 2nd place ad agency and they decided to run both?".
Ruby Vroom
Jan 8, 2004 @ 10:04 am
the person they run into is THEMSELVES at age 17! That's why the person is yelling at them for getting such a bad haircut and an uncool car.
Ha! That makes it even better, then. Teehee. But don't the people they run into look like they're about the same age as the 30something, only wearing 80s garb? They didn't strike me as high-school age. Or am I seriously overthinking a minivan commercial?
cynicat x
Jan 8, 2004 @ 10:45 am
In it, the guy's sitting in his living room facing the camera with the tv turned on in the background. And when he starts to talk, this valley-girl voice comes out and he goes on about this great expensive outfit he bought at the mall
Welcome to TWoP,
2222. You explained the commercial better than I usually do. Just an FYI, that commercial has been discussed multiple times in this thread, and pretty recently too. You may want to make sure you read back as per the
FAQ.
Topic? The history channel has a commercial running to promote their show on Vikings. They show someone going through airport security putting his horned metal Viking hat, sword, shield, etc in one of those grey plastic containers. Then the security guy says: "shoes, too", and this pair of fur covered booties gets added to the pile. See, I'm shitty at descriptions, because it was funnier than what I just wrote...
michelec
Jan 8, 2004 @ 11:22 am
Excuse me granny? While your gone? Last I heard this would be a one way trip. You won't be back, sorry.
Wow, my first ruined keyboard of 2004.
The Yaz song playing in the minvan commercial is "Situation."
Count me as another one who is sick of all the low carb food/diet commercials. Though I guess we should consider ourselves lucky that KFC didn't try to claim their chicken was low carb in that bogus commercial they had a couple of months ago.
jennifuh
Jan 8, 2004 @ 12:14 pm
Count me as another one who is sick of all the low carb food/diet commercials.
Me, too. I wonder if they really think they're contributing to improving the overall health of America, or just jumping on a trend because everyone's doing it, even if it is terribly unhealthy in the end?
As part of my job, I get trend-based newsletters from companies tracking and analyzing them. There is a new trend called "Simple Size" that is promoting the removal of super size portions from menus and reintroducing small sizes. Yeah, let's see how well that goes.
phxchic
Jan 8, 2004 @ 12:23 pm
Though I guess we should consider ourselves lucky that KFC didn't try to claim their chicken was low carb in that bogus commercial they had a couple of months ago.
Maybe I'm not remembering it correctly, but I believe that they did, as part of their claim that fried chicken was healthy (less fat and carbs than a Whopper). I thought that's why they were told to pull it.
formergr
Jan 8, 2004 @ 12:26 pm
There is a new trend called "Simple Size" that is promoting the removal of super size portions from menus and reintroducing small sizes. Yeah, let's see how well that goes.
Well, for the company it'll be great, because I'm sure they won't lower their prices along with the portion size. Arg.
Zelle999
Jan 8, 2004 @ 12:32 pm
I know the "I'm Lovin' It!" ads have been discussed ad nauseum, but can I PLEASE add my hatred for the one where the graffiti (I guess) guy peels himself off the wall and follows those two girls and eventually ends up on the side of a bus. WHAT is that all about? The chalk drawing likes McDonalds enough to stalk those chicks and eventually eats the picture of the hamburger on the side of the bus? Wha? And that ridiculous "Y'all know you wanna get wid DIS" or whatever he says at the end. I HATE HATE HATE this commercial and it's on ALL. THE. TIME.
JedimasterElvis
Jan 8, 2004 @ 1:12 pm
Lucky BishopHowever, Pete Townshend owns his own publishing: even back in the '60s, he knew that that was where the money was.
Well, there ya go.
Thankyouverymuch,
Lucky Bishop for the 411. I was hoping Pete didn't have anything to do with it- but I guess I was wrong. I join
absolutelyisis in the eye-rolling. I won't get fooled again.
Are
Ricola Cough Drop commercials made in the U.S. or are they European in origin? The one I saw last night (businessman takes a cough drop from the Ricola Trio and ends up w/a dropped TV bouncing off his head) had that 'Mentos' feel to me (I believe those are made in Europe and shipped over here along with the mints- that's why there's no dialogue).
Also, I'm totally in lust with the Ricola Cough Drop Girl.
Happy Elvis Day!
PS: Burger Chef ruled...
FfrauleinN
Jan 8, 2004 @ 1:15 pm
There is a new trend called "Simple Size" that is promoting the removal of super size portions from menus and reintroducing small sizes. Yeah, let's see how well that goes.
It should go swimmingly ... if they're trying to start a revolution.
And I am SO glad I haven't seen the McDonald's ad with the stalker graffiti man. It sounds horrifyingly stupid. Why are they torturing us with nonsense like this?
etain
Jan 8, 2004 @ 1:26 pm
There is a new trend called "Simple Size" that is promoting the removal of super size portions from menus and reintroducing small sizes. Yeah, let's see how well that goes.
It should go swimmingly ... if they're trying to start a revolution.
Hey, if this downsizing also comes with a downsizing in price? I'M lovin' it. Seriously -- I barely have the appetite for a "medium" size as it is.
crazy_girl
Jan 8, 2004 @ 1:50 pm
What's sad is that there are actually people out there who believe those commercial claims in healthier fast food. I used to work in this building and all of these really large unhealthy women would use the break room at the same time I did and they were always going on and on about how sometimes a burger from sonic is just as healthy as a salad because "salad dressings have all that fat" and each day they'd talk about getting their fruit with a big old piece of apple pie from McDonalds or a parfait with fruit topping.
They all really believed that a double cheeseburger, large fries, fruit parfait and a super big gulp of Diet Mountain Dew was a healthy meal.
FfrauleinN
Jan 8, 2004 @ 1:57 pm
Hee! Ladies (and gentlemen), apple pie does not a fruit serving make. The parfaits are probably not too bad, though, since it's just yogurt and fruit but (there you are, topic!) I haven't seen any commercials about them.
Jeaux35
Jan 8, 2004 @ 2:33 pm
Hey, put me on the bandwagon for smaller sizes. I was brought up to believe that you never, NEVER throw food away. So even a medium is more than I need (or want, sometimes), but I have this compulsion to finish it. I would welcome more realistic sizes.
Topic? How about McD's now promoting 2 Quarter Pounder combo meals?! And pushing the Super Sizing on top of it! Does anyone really need to eat that much food at one sitting?
You know, as much as I hate those "I'm a victim" lawsuits, I almost (almost) wish someone would win one against the food chains. Because that will be the only way the sizes will come back down to human portions.
And McD's? I'm still Hatin' It, and my one man boycott continues unabated. May you and your ad company rot in hell.
absolutelyisis
Jan 8, 2004 @ 2:52 pm
I join absolutelyisis in the eye-rolling. I won't get fooled again.
Sit here next to me in the eye-rolling section,
JediMasterElvis. Happy Elvismas! Thanks for having that info
Lucky Bishop. I knew it, but couldn't cite it like you did!
JediMasterElvis, do
you remember the name of the vampire in the Burger Chef © commercials? I remember he referred to his wife and children as "My whole fang-mily."
JedimasterElvis
Jan 8, 2004 @ 3:08 pm
absolutelyisisJediMasterElvis, do you remember the name of the vampire in the Burger Chef © commercials?
absolutelyisis, I didn't recall his name- but thanks to the magic of The Internet...
FANGBURGER!
Beginning with this most excellent
Burger Chef tribute site, I bopped over to EBay, where I found
this...
naugastyle
Jan 8, 2004 @ 3:11 pm
I believe that to be the case with Led Zepplins 'Rock & Roll' and Cadillac.
I'm pretty sure Robert Plant OK'd the use of the song. I get tired of hearing songs I love in commercials too, but I think people are often too quick to judge the advertisers. Sure, plenty of artists do not have control over their music but plenty others do--and they choose to get paid more.
That song, by the way, is Yaz's "Don't Go," a favorite of mine since I myself was a snotty '80s kid.
The song in the female version is definitely Yaz's "Situation," but I thought the male version used Animotion's "Obsession." What confuses me is that the wife can
see her husband's former self. Does that happen in the female version of the ad?
JedimasterElvis
Jan 8, 2004 @ 3:14 pm
I'm pretty sure Robert Plant OK'd the use of the song.
Well, okay. I'm an idiot. But, at least I'm still pretty.
Quag
Jan 8, 2004 @ 3:17 pm
Hardee's (which I have to drive 6 miles down the road to) is advertising its low-carb burgers. A big sloppy burger wrapped in lettuce.
Doctor Neon, I was coming here to post just that; but I wanted to watch the ad again because I always caught it at the end, and I kept telling myself, "Oh no they di-n't just call a frickin' wrap a burger and jump on this whole Atkins crap bandwagon!" But I guess they did.
I love both the Big Foot and Boogeyman camera/phone commercials.
I can't remember the name of the product, but I laugh every time I see the ad with the guy mistakingly eating cat treats and saying how good they are. The look on his face when he discovers what he's eating is priceless. This commercial reminds me of when Meow Mix came in a bright yellow cereal-like box. My dad (of the helpless commercial dads) was in a rush one morning and almost gave it to us kids thinking it was cereal. Fortunately, one of us caught it before we ate cat food.
DoctorNeon
Jan 8, 2004 @ 3:39 pm
Rax used to have wicked-cool commercials, but they abandoned the area I lived in, and apparently nobody around here is even aware of their existence.
McDonald's commercials, in the language of less articulate people, are, (sic) "Teh Suck", I'd like to see some big-band style song and dance numbers a-la like the Gap commercials with Brian Setzer orchestra songs. Now that would make me want to watch. Okay, I'm 29 going on 80. But still. You can't beat the classics.
Lucky Bishop
Jan 8, 2004 @ 3:48 pm
Lucky Bishop, isn't it Yaz's "Move Out?" I actually played keyboards on that song, in a snotty '80s kid cover band. Hee! I could be wrong... those Yaz songs are all deliciously catchy, but eerily similar. I think they're all written in the same key, or something.
Trust me on this, guys. I pulled out my copy of
Upstairs At Eric's this morning to verify this, and the song they're using is definitely "Don't Go," not "Situation." It's tricky because frankly the main riff from both songs is pretty much identical, but unless they're using both songs -- one in the male ad and one in the female ad -- it's "Don't Go."
FfrauleinN
Jan 8, 2004 @ 3:56 pm
I'd like to see some big-band style song and dance numbers a-la like the Gap commercials with Brian Setzer orchestra songs.
Damn, I want to see those right now.
ETA: I meant all the ads in that campaign: "Lovely Day," "Jump, Jive, an' Wail," and "Crazy Little Thing Called Love" (the one w/ country-western dancing).
jadefox
Jan 8, 2004 @ 4:05 pm
I'd like to see some big-band style song and dance numbers a-la like the Gap commercials with Brian Setzer orchestra songs.
Damn, I want to see those right now.
Actually, as much as I loved the swing ad, my favorite was the one where everyone was dancing to Bill Withers' "Lovely Day". I love that song.
DoctorNeon
Jan 8, 2004 @ 4:14 pm
The "Hooked on Phonics" commercials are irritating the hell out of me. "She felt that tingle inside, that says, I can do it!!"
No, Mom, li'l Caitlin (or is it Dakota?) got into your Jose Cuervo 1800 this morning. That's the agave talking.
I remember fondly I had to go into rehab for being hooked on phonics. Tough withdrawal.
JoBu
Jan 8, 2004 @ 4:16 pm
I'd like to see some big-band style song and dance numbers a-la like the Gap commercials with Brian Setzer orchestra songs.
Damn, I want to see those right now.
Actually, as much as I loved the swing ad, my favorite was the one where everyone was dancing to Bill Withers' "Lovely Day". I love that song.
Gap's Khaki-a-Go-Go, to me, was the one that freaking rocked. As much as I liked the swing ads, I might put the go-go one in my all-time top 20 favorites.
The Last Dodo
Jan 8, 2004 @ 4:24 pm
Gap's Khaki-a-Go-Go, to me, was the one that freaking rocked.
It's truly sad that now I read that sentence and the first thing that comes to mind is Fran Drescher declaring, "LOGO a GO-GO!" Go to hell, Old Navy. And take the Sheer Blonde twits with you.
FfrauleinN
Jan 8, 2004 @ 4:32 pm
"She felt that tingle inside, that says, I can do it!!"
Maybe it was
PASSION! So inappropriate, I know, but I couldn't help myself.
Which one's the Khaki a Go-Go one again? (And yes, Fran Drescher has wrecked that phrase for me too.)
Sikamikanico
Jan 8, 2004 @ 4:33 pm
I remember fondly I had to go into rehab for being hooked on phonics. Tough withdrawal.
Tell me about it; I was vomiting pronouns and conjunctions for days. I can't even watch School House Rock without getting phantom pains.
The "Hooked on Phonics" commercials are irritating the hell out of me. "She felt that tingle inside, that says, I can do it!!"
How old was lil' Caitlin/Dakota? 'Cause if she's an older kid, that 'tingle inside' could be a sign of a certain "awakening" if you know what I mean.
Ilikegrayarrows
Jan 8, 2004 @ 4:40 pm
The thing that confuses me about the minivan commercials with the folks from the Eighties is that the 80's version of the person isn't into the minivan until they see the hot spouse. They still think the car is dorky, but they're willing to tolerate it because the spouse is nice lookin'. I still think they rock, though.
DoctorNeon
Jan 8, 2004 @ 4:40 pm
I wasn't even going to go there.
I know I felt mine back in the 1980's seeing the "Where's the Beef?" lady.
The Last Dodo
Jan 8, 2004 @ 4:45 pm
I know I felt mine back in the 1980's seeing the "Where's the Beef?" lady.
Yes, but was it the sensation of lit-tle tiny snowmen running up and down your spine?
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