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Super Bowl sets record with 48 minutes of ads

Sun Feb 7, 2010 8:39 PM EST
business, entertainment, us, super-bowl, advertisers, betty-white, bud-light
Emily Fredrix, Associated Press
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<p>This image provided by Anheuser-Busch shows part of a Bud Light television ad being considered for air during the 2010 Super Bowl. (AP Photo/Anheuser-Busch) NO SALES</p>

This image provided by Anheuser-Busch shows part of a Bud Light television ad being considered for air during the 2010 Super Bowl. (AP Photo/Anheuser-Busch) NO SALES

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NEW YORK — Think Sunday night's Super Bowl seemed like it had a lot of ads? You're right. Commercials took up nearly 48 minutes of the game — the most for any Super Bowl.

Research firm Kantar Media said the amount of ads that aired on CBS was nearly 3 minutes longer than last year's total, the previous record holder.

The game also had an unusual number of shorter, 15-second ads. Those let marketers spend less but still be in the advertising world's biggest event.

Commercials typically come in 30-second blocks — which sold this year for between $2.5 million and more than $3 million. But Kantar says seven of this year's 66 ads were just 15 seconds long. That's the most since 2002.

Overall, commercials took up about a quarter of the 3 hours and 15 minutes that spanned kickoff to the end of the game, in which the New Orleans Saints beat the Indianapolis Colts.

Ads by companies including Anheuser-Busch InBev and Coca-Cola Co. took up more than 39 minutes, while the rest went to network promotions, including a memorable 15-second one with late-night show host David Letterman, his longtime NBC archrival Jay Leno, and talk show host Oprah Winfrey.

Anheuser-Busch was again the biggest advertiser in the game. The brewer had nine commercials that lasted 5 minutes, 30 seconds — half a minute more more than it had originally planned. Automaker Hyundai Corp. was the next biggest, with four ads for two and a half minutes.

There were plenty of new faces in the game this year, though not more than in previous years. Out of the 41 advertising companies, nine were first-timers, including video game maker Electronic Arts and Google.

The Internet search giant, which only rarely advertises on television, told an affecting story of a budding relationship through a series of Google searches, beginning with "study abroad" and "how to impress a French woman" and ending with "churches in Paris" and "how to assemble a crib."

© 2010 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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  • Public Discussion (2)
Steve Watts

I noticed a strange theme of misogyny in the ads, especially through the first half. There seemed to be an inordinate amount of ads that were basically men whining about how hard it is to be a man in a woman's world. I couldn't laugh; I was too busy rolling my eyes. One or two might not have bothered me, but the theme seemed pervasive tonight. "Wah, it's so hard to be a man." I audibly cursed at the one that ended with "Man's Last Stand."

Luckily in the second half those types seemed to taper off. The Google ad is probably my favorite of the night, and Intel's "Jeffrey" ad made me laugh. I was glad to see a nod to the Dramatic Hamster, even if it came a few years too late to be hip. And while I don't like Budweiser's beer, and their commercials are almost never my absolute favorites, they can be counted on for solid, reliable entertainment value.

  • 2 votes
Reply#1 - Sun Feb 7, 2010 10:29 PM EST
Anne-1040262

The ads this year seemed to lack the sparkle of pervious years. All the "man" stuff went overboad since women watched the Super Bowl too. Number one ad for me was the "Fiddle Playing Beaver". Number two was the Clydesdale and the Bull -"friends."

    Reply#2 - Mon Feb 8, 2010 2:56 PM EST
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