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'Halftime in America' ad creates political debate

Mon Feb 6, 2012 6:49 PM EST
us-news, us, barack-obama, america, detroit, clint-eastwood, in-america, halftime-in-america, but-chrysler
Corey Williams, Associated Press
< PreviousNext >
showing 1 of 4 photos
<p>This advertisement provided by Chrysler Group LLC, shows actor Clint Eastwood, featured in an ad titled "It's Halftime In America," which aired during Super Bowl XVLI, Sunday, Feb. 5, 2012. AP Photo/Chrysler Group LLC)</p>

This advertisement provided by Chrysler Group LLC, shows actor Clint Eastwood, featured in an ad titled "It's Halftime In America," which aired during Super Bowl XVLI, Sunday, Feb. 5, 2012. AP Photo/Chrysler Group LLC)

Advertise | AdChoices

DETROIT — People rarely pick a fight with Dirty Harry. But Chrysler's "Halftime in America" ad featuring quintessential tough guy Clint Eastwood has generated fierce debate about whether it accurately portrays the country's most economically distressed city or amounts to a campaign ad for President Barack Obama and the auto bailouts.

The 2-minute ad holds up Detroit as a model for American recovery while idealistic images of families, middle class workers and factories scroll across the screen.

"People are out of work and they're hurting," the 81-year-old Eastwood says in his trademark gravelly voice. "And they're all wondering what they're gonna do to make a comeback. And we're all scared because this isn't a game. The people of Detroit know a little something about this. They almost lost everything. But we all pulled together. Now, Motor City is fighting again."

Conservatives, including GOP strategist Karl Rove, criticized the ad as a not-so-thinly veiled endorsement of the federal government's auto industry bailouts. Others questioned basing a story of economic resurgence in a city that remains in fiscal disarray, with a $200 million budget deficit and cash flow concerns that have it fending off a state takeover.

But is it political? That depends on who you ask.

"I can't stop anybody from associating themselves with a message, but it was not intended to be any type of political overture on our part," Chrysler Chief Executive Sergio Marchionne told WJR-AM in Detroit. "You know, we're just an ingredient of a big machine here in this country that makes us go on."

Last year was a pivotal turnaround year for Chrysler, which nearly collapsed in 2009. The company and its financial arm needed a $12.5 billion government bailout and a trip through bankruptcy protection to survive. Chrysler has since repaid its U.S. and Canadian government loans by refinancing them, but the U.S. government says it lost about $1.3 billion on the deal.

The ad with Eastwood, who previously publicly slammed the auto bailout, follows a highly popular one that aired last Super Bowl featuring hip-hop star and Detroit-native Eminem driving a Chrysler 200 through stark city streets — and introduced the tagline "Imported From Detroit."

This time around, the focus was on faces and factories — far less on cars. Monday editions of USA Today came wrapped in a four-page ad that features Eastwood and images from the commercial. It also touts investments outside Detroit, specifically in Belvidere, Ill., where it's making the new Dodge Dart.

That ad notes the company is "doing our part to move America forward. To help win this country's second half for all of us."

But despite "Halftime in America's" celebration of Detroit, none of the new footage was filmed in that city, said Wieden + Kennedy, the Portland, Ore., agency that produced the ad. The portions of the commercial featuring Eastwood were filmed in the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum and the rest of the production was shot in New Orleans and Northern California. The ad does feature previously filmed footage of Detroit, said Dianna Gutierrez, a Chrysler spokeswoman.

"It was very powerful, not only for Detroit but for the country and also for Chrysler," said Allen Adamson, a managing director at brand consulting firm Landor Associates Adamson. "Of all the three, Chrysler was the least likely to succeed, the least likely to survive the storm. And they have come out with potentially the strongest story."

Adamson also compared the spot to Ronald Reagan's "Morning in America" ad in 1984, which tried to capture a feeling of American optimism during his re-election campaign. Reagan's ad showed images of people going to work, buying homes, and getting married in greater numbers.

Rove told Fox News on Monday that he was "offended" by Chrysler's ad, saying it amounted to "using our tax dollars to buy corporate advertising and the best-wishes of the management which is benefited by getting a bunch of our money that they'll never pay back."

Obama spokesman Jay Carney told the AP that the White House had no role in in the ad's production, but said it pointed out "a simple fact, which is that the auto industry in this country was on its back and potentially poised to liquidate three years ago."

"This president made decisions that were not very popular at the time that were guided by two important principles," Carney said. "One, that he should do what he could to ensure that one million jobs would not be lost and, two, that the American automobile industry should be able to thrive globally if the right conditions were created, and that included the kinds of reforms and restructuring that Chrysler and GM undertook in exchange for the assistance from the American taxpayer."

Eastwood, a fiscal conservative who is more liberal on social issues including gay marriage and environmental protections, has mixed with politics before. The former nonpartisan mayor of Carmel, Calif., who supported GOP presidential contender John McCain in 2008, told the Los Angeles Times last November that he can't ever recall voting for a Democrat for president but expressed admiration for California's Democratic Gov. Jerry Brown.

On Monday, he told Fox News he is "certainly not politically affiliated with Mr. Obama."

"It was meant to be a message about just about job growth and the spirit of America," Eastwood said of the Chrysler ad. "I think all politicians will agree with it. I thought the spirit was OK."

Eastwood's longtime manager Leonard Hirshan told the AP that any stance Eastwood took on the auto bailout "has nothing to do with the commercial." He said the actor donated his fee from the commercial to a charity in Monterey, Calif., near where he lives.

Detroit Mayor Dave Bing called Chrysler's ad a bit of positive public relations for a city that rarely pats itself on the back.

"I think the history in Detroit is one that is gritty. People have been down, but they get back up and they don't quit," Bing said. "Chrysler, they've been down more than once and they have not quit and they've come back."

Analyst Bill Carroll of New York-based Katz Media called the ad effective American and industry boosterism.

"I don't know that I would consider it political, other than if being pro-American is political, then it's political," Carroll said. "If underscoring the fact that the auto industry has made a significant comeback and is bringing back manufacturing jobs to the U.S. is political, then so be it."

___

Associated Press writers Mae Anderson in New York, Jim Kuhnhenn in Washington, Lynn Elber in Los Angeles and Tom Krisher, David Runk and Mike Householder in Detroit contributed to this report.

Online:

http://youtu.be/caswcc0raw4

© 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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  • Corey Williams's Column, All of Newsvine
  • Groups: cweSpring2012
  • Regions: United States , Detroit
  • Public Discussion (92)
Jump to discussion page: 1 2
snarky68

LOL There are at least 4 seeds posted over this! You do realize it was a car commecial right?? Read too deep and the hyperbole begins!!

  • 19 votes
#1 - Mon Feb 6, 2012 7:00 PM EST
TooManyPuppies

"If underscoring the fact that the auto industry has made a significant comeback and is bringing back manufacturing jobs to the U.S. is political, then so be it."

still it is hard to deny that the GOP said that we no longer needed the auto industry at all.

It might not actually be political of a commercial but it does foster political discussions which need to be discussed.

  • 16 votes
#1.1 - Mon Feb 6, 2012 7:26 PM EST
Linda Luke

Indeed just read an article about Detroit people arming themselves as there is little police protection and they don't come right away when you call them. Their police force has been cut by over half. The elite neighborhoods are buying protection with huge costs but that can't be done in the middle/lower class neighborhoods.

  • 5 votes
#1.2 - Mon Feb 6, 2012 7:48 PM EST
shaunb

let's get real, this is pro-obama's policy for helping detroit outta collapse. i think he can campaign with this & other positive stories.

  • 8 votes
#1.3 - Mon Feb 6, 2012 7:58 PM EST
NC Slim

#1.2

Chrysler car commercial. Detroit is the symbol of the auto industry.

  • 8 votes
#1.4 - Mon Feb 6, 2012 8:00 PM EST
ryoushi12

I'd just like to thank all the maroons on the right, starting with faux noise and rove the pig, for keeping this alive. If they'd just shutup about it, it would have been dead by wednsday. Now, it will be on the talk shows all week, Wait Wait Don't Tell Me, MSNBC, CNN, Car Talk, you name it.

So, thanks tothe many righties everywhere, for taking your brains out of gear and putting your mouths in gear.

  • 18 votes
#1.5 - Mon Feb 6, 2012 8:11 PM EST
CreepingJesus

So, thanks tothe many righties everywhere, for taking your brains out of gear...

Brains?

  • 11 votes
#1.6 - Mon Feb 6, 2012 9:03 PM EST
Roy-933464

I'd just like to thank all the maroons on the right, starting with faux noise and rove the pig, for keeping this alive.

Yep. I was playing "Family Feud" on my iPad and half watching much of the game and NONE of the half-time stuff. I never would have seen it.

  • 5 votes
#1.7 - Mon Feb 6, 2012 10:31 PM EST
Lola-984242

Loved it!!!!

  • 9 votes
#1.8 - Mon Feb 6, 2012 11:17 PM EST
Arlene Tognetti

Lola-984242

I am with you, Loved it!

Clint Eastwood...classic Americana, telling us we need to pull together, super~

Righton!

  • 13 votes
#1.9 - Mon Feb 6, 2012 11:53 PM EST
Arieus

I never watch the Super Bowl, for me it's a waste of time. As for the commercial, here the complete commercial without someone speaking over it.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tFAiqxm1FDA

I see nothing wrong with it.

  • 4 votes
#1.10 - Mon Feb 6, 2012 11:58 PM EST
Yeah, right!

Actually, I saw it when it first aired and, I thought it was Detroit's attempt to point out that they (the American Auto Industry) were coming back and I honestly didn't see anything more than that the first time.

Honestly, it seemed like it was just a reminder that they were grateful for the bailout and that they weren't pi$$ing that money away but actually using it to get back into the "fight" so-to-speak....

Which, given that's precisely what we gave them that money to do.... Seemed kinda appropriate....

That said, can some draw political conclusions from it? Probably. But, honestly, I didn't even think about that other stuff until it was helpfully pointed out to me by the GOP.

Now that is has been though....

Why does it seem like they had- and continue to have- such a problem with American Manufacturing?.... Isn't that what everyone's been complaining about us not having enough of? I mean, you hear about jobs getting "shipped overseas" everyday whenever someone mentions the bad economy.... Why do they seem to be actually for that for any job?

  • 6 votes
#1.11 - Mon Feb 6, 2012 11:59 PM EST
ScreamingForVengeance

It seems that small fact means little here. It's a car commercial for Christs sake. One that recommends that you buy American.

So WTF?

  • 4 votes
#1.12 - Tue Feb 7, 2012 2:26 AM EST
George-369262

'still it is hard to deny that the GOP said that we no longer needed the auto industry at all.' It would have made far more sense to allow the car companies to go bankrupt, the pieces sold off, and life goes on.

Chrysler: an Italian-owned company which manufactures cars in Canada and Mexico.

  • 1 vote
#1.13 - Tue Feb 7, 2012 2:31 AM EST
Robert Blevins - AB of Seattle

I am behind the basic theme of the commercial. The economy.

  • 2 votes
#1.14 - Tue Feb 7, 2012 2:50 AM EST
Oliver Closoff

The message in the commercial wasn't political but what happens in the second half is.

Getting yourself together doesn't mean ripping on wealthy people. It doesn't mean looking to the government to solve your problems. It doesn't mean losing control of our values and degrading religious beliefs. It doesn't mean diluting our culture to the point we become a third world country. It doesn't mean rewarding the lowest common denominator in the work place. It doesn't mean putting teachers desires ahead of quality education. It doesn't mean accumulating unsustainable amounts of debt through massive government deficits.

Today's society is wealthy beyond the belief of most at the turn of the 20th century and much of the world today, yet we live in a whiny culture of complaint that aspires to very little that is truly noble when stripped of its utopian political facade.

So it's halftime, but are you going to stick with poor play calling of a incompetent president who divides us and devalues what made this country great or are you going to challenge yourself to do better? The whole world is watching!

  • 1 vote
#1.15 - Tue Feb 7, 2012 2:56 AM EST
caballojoe

I wouldn't have thought to use the word whiny, but your second paragraph has 7 whines alone. Perhaps you're right. Now if only the whininess was based on reality instead of misconceptions, over-generalizations and exagerations!

    #1.16 - Tue Feb 7, 2012 10:40 AM EST
    HappyToSeeYa

    Oliver Closoff

    Today's society is wealthy beyond the belief of most at the turn of the 20th century

    True: for the 1%; many people who were middle class in 2007 are now poor and homeless
    ~ * ~ * ~ * ~ * ~ * ~ * ~ * ~ * ~ * ~ * ~ * ~ * ~ * ~ * ~ * ~ * ~ * ~ * ~ * ~ * ~ * ~ * ~ * ~ * ~ * ~ * ~ * ~ * ~ * ~ *

    I know that this ad hurts teapublcons eyes and ears, but the fact remains that a teapublicon advocated for letting the auto industry fail. Well, President Obama didn't let the auto industry fail because he knew the ripple effect on jobs and our country would be too much to bear.

    A cyberwave to Chrysler for presenting an inspirational message for America with an unspoken thank you to President Obama. Chrysler could not have presented this message if President Obama had followed through on what Romney advocated which was to let the auto industry fail.

    • 3 votes
    #1.17 - Tue Feb 7, 2012 2:53 PM EST
    Rickeroo

    I would have much rather seen Eastwood do a commercial for an American car company, not Chrysler.

      #1.18 - Tue Feb 7, 2012 4:28 PM EST
      Oliver Closoff

      teapublicon advocated for letting the auto industry fail.

      That's just a flat out lie.

      The US auto industry would have been no worse off than they are today. They're still miserable failures and they're still beholden to the unions which in large measure is all Obummer really intended to accomplish.

      But you simply don't get it

      THe problem here isn't the ad. The ad was fine. In fact it's fairly obvious from the article and subsequent comment that lefties don't even understand the ad and neither does Rove ultimately since he is reacting to the left's misinterpretation of the ad.

      But that's not a surprise because the people that directed the ad don't even have a clue what they were doing with the Halftime in America imagery. How do you like that @!$%#ing @!$%#. These ass douches are so @!$%#ing clueless they didn't even know what they were trying to tap into. All they really knew from their superficial intellect is that it would sell.

        #1.19 - Wed Feb 8, 2012 10:06 PM EST
        Reply
        belle42

        Rove told Fox News on Monday that he was "offended" by Chrysler's ad, saying it amounted to "using our tax dollars to buy corporate advertising and the best-wishes of the management which is benefited by getting a bunch of our money that they'll never pay back."

        Hey, corporations are people now. They can buy ads and support whoever they want. And there's nothing you can do about that Mr Rove.

        • 26 votes
        Reply#2 - Mon Feb 6, 2012 7:32 PM EST
        NC Slim

        Belle:

        If this was an Olympic event--you'd get a Perfect 10-10-10! LOL!

        • 11 votes
        #2.1 - Mon Feb 6, 2012 8:03 PM EST
        Rixar13

        Rove told Fox News on Monday that he was "offended" by Chrysler's ad, saying it amounted to "using our tax dollars to buy corporate advertising and the best-wishes of the management which is benefited by getting a bunch of our money that they'll never pay back."

        Karl Rove, the first to whine.... yawn

        • 13 votes
        #2.2 - Mon Feb 6, 2012 8:09 PM EST
        Greenwood10

        .

        • 2 votes
        #2.3 - Mon Feb 6, 2012 8:39 PM EST
        Reply
        Earl the Nebraskan

        Offending Rove is an herculean feat. I don't think his paymasters would have expected any less.

        • 13 votes
        Reply#3 - Mon Feb 6, 2012 7:33 PM EST
        genevieveva

        I think it is time for Karl Rove and the GOP needs to stop acting like punks and bullies. If anyone wants to be angry, it is that corporations are feeding us information and misinformation. Some pretend they are News.

        • 11 votes
        Reply#4 - Mon Feb 6, 2012 7:35 PM EST
        Philip Grant

        Help me out here.

        Isn't there a commercial that's been out for little while that depicts various people in a boxing ring who are getting up off the mat? It's the exact same theme, I just can't remember who the sponsor is.

        If they're gonna poop their pants every time a company makes a "we're coming back" commercial, then they better hope that angle doesn't become popular. Advertising companies use what ever works.

        • 5 votes
        Reply#5 - Mon Feb 6, 2012 7:44 PM EST
        Hartvig Lein

        It's just sad what the Republican party has become. How is it even possible that they can view positive economic news from a troubled American industry as somehow offensive?

        • 16 votes
        #5.1 - Mon Feb 6, 2012 8:21 PM EST
        Jimster

        Believe me, the last thing a Republican wants in the media is a positive portrayal of the economy while Obama is in office, that the country is on the mend, and that things are getting better for our country.

        It keeps then awake a night

        • 8 votes
        #5.2 - Tue Feb 7, 2012 12:42 AM EST
        Reply
        Thinknaboutit

        What kind of American citizen is offended by a commercial touting the resilience of the American people? If you consider America recovering from the recession a political attack, perhaps it is time to reconsider your politics?

        • 18 votes
        Reply#6 - Mon Feb 6, 2012 8:00 PM EST
        caballojoe

        What kind indeed! It seems the American economic recovery is bad politics for the GOP.

        • 4 votes
        #6.1 - Tue Feb 7, 2012 10:42 AM EST
        demmie-1555521

        Nothing brought Republican Americans closer than 2 wars and real rich president. Seems like jobs don't really matter to them anymore. I guess they forget how many of those automakers and steel factories made parts for WW II, to defend this country from the attack on Pearl Harbor.

        Our men and women died for this country, and now we are driving Toyota's to thank vets for that horrible Day. You can count on a Republican to bury the past..... as long as the future brings money.

        • 4 votes
        #6.2 - Tue Feb 7, 2012 6:31 PM EST
        Reply
        yvonne stevenson

        Uplifting,a sign of better days ahead for us all.Remenber ford took no tax dollars! And GM has paid the debt back.

        Great for american workers, Good job President Obama.

        Carl Rove,Well guess you know where you can put your negative commons.

        • 16 votes
        Reply#7 - Mon Feb 6, 2012 8:01 PM EST
        David-604380

        Yes, this ad, no matter it's intention, benefits the President, and rightly so. Eastwood, not a Democrat, had opposed the auto bailouts, and now admits he was wrong. The rescue of the auto industry has reinstated the US as a leader in manufacturing and has benefitted thousands of families as well as the whole economy. That is the anathema to Rove, et al, who hoped that every effort of Obama failed, no matter the human cost. Well, he was wrong, too, and needs to admit it, but of course, won't.

        And in case you missed the "cost" to the taxpayer of a little more than a billion dollars, realize that we spend more than that to prop up the Egyptian Army. While that's okay, it seems appropriate also to spend money to prop up our own economy, cities and people. I'm sure that Rove, Romney, Trump and others feel the same way, don't they?

        • 13 votes
        Reply#8 - Mon Feb 6, 2012 8:01 PM EST
        Thinknaboutit

        Eastwood, not a Democrat, had opposed the auto bailouts, and now admits he was wrong.

        Something that most republicans have forgotten how to do.

        • 12 votes
        #8.1 - Mon Feb 6, 2012 8:09 PM EST
        bdebogota

        The mere fact that Teapublikans can find a truthful and positive ad about America's recovery, the saving of the auto industry and American Exceptionalism and courage so politically skewed is all the information you need about how totally traitorous to America in the form of anti-Obamism those morons are. In effect, by suggesting that it is a pro-Obama, pro-Democrat ad, they are tacitly admitting that they are unhappy that the country is turning the corner and that the auto industry has not only survived, it has thrived.

        • 8 votes
        #8.2 - Mon Feb 6, 2012 8:35 PM EST
        bdebogota

        And in case you missed the "cost" to the taxpayer of a little more than a billion dollars, realize that we spend more than that to prop up the Egyptian Army.

        Plus, I don't see anyone in the Egyptian Army saving, let alone expanding, a vital American industry, strengthening the American middle-class, buying American products and paying taxes and Social Security into the American Treasury. In short, consider the $1.3B as yet unpaid as the best investment in the future this country could have ever made - which, given the economy at the time and the obstructionsm of the Teapublikans, was an act of HUGE cojones on Obama's part. Thank you, Barak. You deserve to be re-elected for this accomplishment alone.

        • 7 votes
        #8.3 - Mon Feb 6, 2012 8:40 PM EST
        Reply
        wildddkattt80

        Obama GAVE this financial yahoos money without any conditions. I wish I could go to the bank and ask for money without conditions. The banks did not do anything with that money. They foreclosed on people; they did not approve loans from even some of the best people with credit. Now those same institutions keep holding on to properties and just sit on them. They have no interest in selling them. I gave up going to a bank years ago because I just frankly got tired of their services. I would not give them a penny to help them and I haven't in years.

        • 1 vote
        Reply#9 - Mon Feb 6, 2012 8:02 PM EST
        David-604380

        Bush bailed out the Banks with no conditions. Get your facts straight.

        And BTW, they don't miss you.

        • 15 votes
        #9.1 - Mon Feb 6, 2012 8:05 PM EST
        Reply
        apmprescott

        Rove is "offended". Well I am offended over how he and his fellow ideologues created the downward economic spiral that nearly put the country into a depression. So, I guess we are even.

        • 11 votes
        Reply#10 - Mon Feb 6, 2012 8:03 PM EST
        ScienceGuy-356641

        The resurrection of the U.S. auto industry was good for middle class America, and as we have repeatedly observed over the past 3 years, if it is good for the vast majority of Americans, then it is bad for the GOP.

        • 13 votes
        Reply#11 - Mon Feb 6, 2012 8:13 PM EST
        digcreation

        oh no.. a positive message ... attack! attack!

        • 10 votes
        Reply#12 - Mon Feb 6, 2012 8:15 PM EST
        xrayspex

        Go Clint, Go Chrysler and Go Detroit !!!

        • 13 votes
        Reply#13 - Mon Feb 6, 2012 8:25 PM EST
        Arlene Tognetti

        Ditto

        America is back on Top!

        • 5 votes
        #13.1 - Mon Feb 6, 2012 11:56 PM EST
        Reply
        Bill-795009

        Not a surprise that Karl Rove would slant this ad in the direction of politics. Also, not a surprise that any politician would find a way to stretch the ad into the political arena. Mention anything about this country to the masses and they take it personally. Maybe they should! Our government can't figure out how to resolve the differences between political parties let alone what to do for the betterment of the country as a whole.

        As for Karl Rove, find the same hole your boyfriend Bush crawled into and join him. Just shut up, we the people are handling matters now!

        • 5 votes
        Reply#14 - Mon Feb 6, 2012 8:27 PM EST
        bdebogota

        The ad must have been cut short. I expected the last sentence Eastwood would utter would be, "Except if your a Teapublikan." Truth in advertising! Whether intentional or not, it certainly was a pro-Obama ad and the fact that it does not have bi-partisan application is nobody's fault but the Teapublikans'. Teapublikan obstructionism and anti-Detroit bailout rhetoric at the time now disqualifies them from participating in the benefits - although I'm sure they'll try to muscle in on some. But the fact that they find the ad objectionable is because they find the recovery and the saving of the auto industry objectionable. Why? Why because Obama manufactured it, of course, and anything positive for Obama is negative for them; even if it is positive for the country as well. Traitors all.

        • 3 votes
        Reply#15 - Mon Feb 6, 2012 8:29 PM EST
        Amorougen

        Wake up folks. They are trying to sell cars. The management there has no need to kiss Obama's behind, but it is important for them to make money. All the thousands of people working in the supply chain think so too. To think otherwise is to be deluded completely.

        • 3 votes
        Reply#16 - Mon Feb 6, 2012 8:30 PM EST
        bdebogota

        Bullpucky! This was not a "sales" pitch for cars, it was an uplifting, positive valentine to the American public and a thank you to Obama and the Democrats. It didn't even mention Chrysler and only showed a Dodge production line for about a nanosecond. If they wanted to sell Chryslers, that may have been the worst focused, product-oriented ad in the history of commercial advertising. If Obama had saved my life, my family and my home and gave my children a shot at a better future, I'm pretty sure I'd be thanking him publicly, too.

        • 8 votes
        #16.1 - Mon Feb 6, 2012 8:48 PM EST
        spankola

        Uplifting America is bullpucky?

        Saving lives is bullpucky ?

        Saving families is bullpucky?

        Giving children a better future is bullpucky?

        Mitt, is that you???

        • 6 votes
        #16.2 - Mon Feb 6, 2012 10:37 PM EST
        bdebogota

        My "Bullpucky!" comment was directed to Amorougen's post. But I may have misunderstood yours.

          #16.3 - Tue Feb 7, 2012 12:03 AM EST
          Jimster

          bdebogota-

          Watch the Chrysler ad from the 2010 Super Bowl with Eminem

          Chrysler Eminem Super Bowl Commercial - Imported From Detroit

          Now watch:

          It's Halftime in America" Chrysler Commercial

          See the similar style and production values?

          I knew that you could.

          • 4 votes
          #16.4 - Tue Feb 7, 2012 1:04 AM EST
          spankola

          I did not misinterpreted your post. I just twisted and spun it and took it out of context and flip it into some anti-Romney smack.

          True, but I believe the ad is a classic double entendre and beautifully done.

          • 3 votes
          #16.5 - Tue Feb 7, 2012 2:13 AM EST
          Reply
          Kemo Sabe

          Karl Rove and all the other Republican conservative individuals have BIG EGOS that need to be fed daily by being on TV and in our faces with their pathetic comments.

          How can anybody compare the life, the education and the works of somebody like Clint Eastwood with Karl Rove and the likes......? It is something not even worth mentioning and could never be matched.

          I never watch Karl Rove or anyone like him anyway; simply because they are "negative" people that always speak and talk about "negative" things.

          • 7 votes
          Reply#17 - Mon Feb 6, 2012 8:44 PM EST
          GoldenGateMami_Susi

          So, what city is the GOP counterpoint?

          Where was their ad?

          • 12 votes
          Reply#18 - Mon Feb 6, 2012 9:09 PM EST
          AhhCrap

          They burned up all their extra cash trying to get Bachmental elected. Carl Rove is trying to get a loan from the Koch's.

          • 10 votes
          #18.1 - Mon Feb 6, 2012 9:50 PM EST
          GoldenGateMami_Susi

          Just as I thought.

          No answers from the "economy saving job creators."

          That list they are compiling must be longer than Santa's list.

          • 2 votes
          #18.2 - Tue Feb 7, 2012 8:16 PM EST
          Reply
          yvonne stevenson

          What a great message from Clint Eastwood, The conservative who has never voted for a democrat in his life,That says a lot as to how Mr.Eastwood feels about the steps president Obama took to save the auto industry & american jobs.

          Americans must remember republicans said let them FAIL,just like letting the bottom drop out of the housing mess ( Romney ) & others

          • 8 votes
          Reply#19 - Mon Feb 6, 2012 9:15 PM EST
          Sickupanfed

          You do realize Chrysler is part of Fiat now..... fitting name considering what our government is doing to the dollar.

          • 1 vote
          Reply#20 - Mon Feb 6, 2012 9:37 PM EST
          DEATHNELL J.

          Clint says it like it "IS"!

          • 9 votes
          Reply#21 - Mon Feb 6, 2012 9:40 PM EST
          AlKhidr

          If a car commercial was made of the GOP's vision of America, it would be the final scene in Thelma & Louise.

          • 8 votes
          Reply#22 - Mon Feb 6, 2012 9:51 PM EST
          charger383

          Good one

          • 2 votes
          #22.1 - Mon Feb 6, 2012 11:18 PM EST
          Reply
          spankola

          I know what you're thinking. "Did he did he support Obama or Chrysler?" Well, to tell you the truth, in all this excitement I kind of lost track myself. But being as this is about a Dodge Magnum, the most powerful Truck in the world, and would blow your head clean off, you've got to ask yourself one question: Are just a right wing whiner? Well, are ya, punk?

          • 8 votes
          Reply#23 - Mon Feb 6, 2012 9:54 PM EST
          ryoushi12

          Pricelss

          ROTFLMAO

          • 2 votes
          #23.1 - Tue Feb 7, 2012 10:10 AM EST
          Reply
          MNniceguy

          This current group of GOP/TPers would have let an America Icon fail with the loss untold numbers of American Jobs.

          Let them fail the GOP/TP right yelled, just let it happen, quote = Mitt Rommney

          I share MR, Eastwood determined look as I ask?

          HEY GOP/TP Ilk,

          Where are you FOR! America??

          Are you still American! Or is you’re Master the all mighty $$$$

          • 10 votes
          Reply#24 - Mon Feb 6, 2012 10:13 PM EST
          One Fishstick out of a dozen

          Who cares. Obama is going to win again. The Gop cant seem to find anyone worthwhile to run. Heck McCain was a better choice than this lot and he lost to Obama. I dont know what they were thinking.

          • 5 votes
          Reply#25 - Mon Feb 6, 2012 10:14 PM EST
          spankola

          They'er thinking "Talk Show on Fox"

          • 2 votes
          #25.1 - Mon Feb 6, 2012 10:23 PM EST
          MNniceguy

          One Fishstick out of a dozen:

          With no disrespects! Who cares??? . Obama is going to win again???.

          W.H.A.T !
          The fat lady has not sung yet! (no disrespects to fat ladys) This a'int over. The dog fight is just getting started.

          WE,, U.S need to get started and counter attack the GOP hate Fest!

          Obama 2012

          • 7 votes
          #25.2 - Mon Feb 6, 2012 10:47 PM EST
          Reply
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